from
/fɹʌm/
UK: /fɹɒm/
from
English
Prep Top 74
American (Amy)
(medium)
Female
0.7s
American (Ryan)
(medium)
Male
0.2s
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Definition
Used to indicate source or provenance.
Etymology
From Middle English from (“from”), from Old English from, fram (“forward, from”), from Proto-West Germanic *fram, from Proto-Germanic *fram (“forward, from, away”). Cognate with Old Saxon fram (“from”) and Old High German fram (“from”), Danish frem (“forth, forward”), Danish fra (“from”), Swedish fram (“forth, forward”), Swedish från (“from”), Norwegian Nynorsk fram (“forward”), Norwegian Nynorsk frå (“from”), Icelandic fram (“forward, on”), Icelandic frá (“from”), Albanian pre, prej. More at fro.
Example Sentences
- "Paul is from New Zealand."
- "I got a letter from my brother."
- "You can't get all your news from the Internet."
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