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Example sentences for "know from"

  • Thus the plants of Kerguelen Land, though standing nearer to Africa than to America, are related, and that very closely, as we know from Dr.

  • What I beg you to do is to let me know from Southey, if that will be time enough for the "Quarterly," i.

  • That it did so we know from Widsith, and from the same source we know that this Heathobard attack was repulsed by the combined strength of Hrothgar and his nephew Hrothulf.

  • We know from Xenophon[14] that Sokrates considered Dialectic to be founded, both etymologically and really, upon the distribution of particular things into genera or classes.

  • That Speusippus was among the borrowers from the Pythagoreans, we know from Aristotle (Eth.

  • And we know from Proklus[51] that there were critics in ancient times, who depreciated various parts of the Parmenides as sophistical.

  • He was speaking about blank verse, to which he always had a dislike, as we know from an interesting incident mentioned by Boswell.

  • And that nobody else but Brahman is hidden in the cave we know from a subsequent passage, viz.

  • We know from Fanny's own testimony that the boy spent every spare moment at the piano, and that she did her utmost to prevent it.

  • He also attempted an historical essay in verse on Joan of Arc, whom he had learnt to know from Masson's Les Enfants célèbres.

  • I am very anxious about Bob, although I know from my own experience that at his age we easily recover from such blows.

  • This great writer was born at Amiternum in the year in which Marius died, and, as we know from himself, he came to Rome burning with ambition to ennoble his name, and studied with that purpose the various arts of popularity.

  • We know from Cicero's oration on behalf of Archias that it was no rare accomplishment among the wits of that nation.

  • Antony, as we know from Cicero, even entered the fact in the Fasti, or religious calendar.

  • At the close of his life he retired to the Irish monastery of Bobbio, in the north of Italy, founded by Columbanus, to which he left all his books, as we know from Muratori's published list.

  • We know from the Book of Armagh that it has been thus recited at least from the eighth century, so that even then its use was universal, and in a certain sense obligatory.

  • The sterility in many cases, as I know from my own observation, is simply due to the absence of the proper insects for carrying the pollen to the stigma.

  • We know from day-to-day experience that the chance for a just solution is immeasurably increased when everyone directly interested is given a voice.

  • I'm familiar with their problem, and I know from Congress' action that you are too.

  • We know from a document seen by Pelli that in 1350 the Or San Michele Society sent Beatrice ten gold florins by the hand of Boccaccio.

  • We know from Esarhaddon's inscriptions that by the Assyrians these Kimmerians were called Manda, their prince Teupsa (Teispe) being described as "of the people of the Manda.

  • That the Danga came from the south we know from a later inscription at Karnak, and that the word meant dwarf is clear from the accompanying determinative of a short person of stunted growth.

  • That Chaucer loved it, we know from one of the too rare autobiographical passages in his poems, describing his shy seclusion even more plainly than the Host hints at it in the "Canterbury Tales.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "know from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    good neighbour; know also; know anything; know better; know but; know good and evil; know her; know just; know much; know nothin; know the; know thee; know they; know what; know where; know who; know your; knowing nothing; knowing that; knowing what; knowledge and; known under the name; known voice; knows that; may not; western corner