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therefrom
[thair-fruhm, -from]
therefrom
/ ˌðɛəˈڰɒ /
adverb
archaicfrom that or there
the roads that lead therefrom
Word History and Origins
Origin of therefrom1
Example Sentences
The lease said that no “elected official of the government of the United States” shall “be admitted to any share or part of this lease, or to any benefit that may arise therefrom.”
“The recommendations arising therefrom are untruthful, full of bias and double standards. China rejected those recommendations.”
It is the left that has put us on a never-ending euphemism treadmill, transforming “illegal alien” into “illegal immigrant” and therefrom to “undocumented worker” and so on — and across many sensitive issues.
Public pursuit of happiness, he proposes, ought to include access to nature and the salubrity derived therefrom.
But, however overwrought Anna’s sensibility sometimes is, Mrs. Lessing points such powerful significances therefrom that, in comparison, many other highly touted novels dealing with man’s acceptance — or defiance — of his fate seem picayune indeed.
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Related Words
When To Use
Therefrom means from the thing or place that was just mentioned, as in Our freedom is based on the Constitution and all the rights derived therefrom (translation: Our freedom is based on the Constitution and all the rights derived from it).Therefrom is fairly formal. It’s often used in legal language, but it can also be used in everyday speech and writing.Example: The nation’s economy is heavily reliant on its neighbor country and tourism therefrom.
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