from

from / frəm/ • prep. 1. indicating the point in space at which a journey, motion, or action starts: she began to walk away from him I leapt from my bed | fig. he was turning the committee away from appeasement. ∎  indicating the distance between a particular place and another place used as a point of reference: the ambush occurred 50 yards from a checkpoint. 2. indicating the point in time at which a particular process, event, or activity starts: the show will run from 10 to 2. 3. indicating the source or provenance of someone or something: I'm from Hartford she phoned him from the hotel she demanded the keys from her husband. ∎  indicating the date at which something was created: a document dating from the thirteenth century. 4. indicating the starting point of a specified range on a scale: men who ranged in age from seventeen to eighty-four. ∎  indicating one extreme in a range of conceptual variations: anything from geography to literature. 5. indicating the point at which an observer is placed: you can see the island from here | fig. the ability to see things from another's point of view. 6. indicating the raw material out of which something is manufactured: a varnish made from copal. 7. indicating separation or removal: the party was ousted from power after sixteen years. 8. indicating prevention: the story of how he was saved from death. 9. indicating a cause: a child suffering from asthma. 10. indicating a source of knowledge or the basis for one's judgment: information obtained from papers, books, and presentations. 11. indicating a distinction: the courts view him in a different light from that of a manual worker. PHRASES: as fromsee as1 . from day to day (or hour to hour, etc.) daily (or hourly, etc.); as the days (or hours, etc.) pass. from now (or then, etc.) on now (or then, etc.) and in the future: they were friends from that day on. from time to time occasionally.

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"from." The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English. 2009. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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