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FROM

From is a common English preposition and adverb that indicates origin, source, or starting point. It appears in phrases such as "She is from Canada," "pull from a drawer," and "from now on." It can also denote departure or separation, as in "move away from the city." In addition, from often anchors adverbial expressions like "from scratch" or "from the beginning."

Grammatically, from contrasts with other directional terms and can govern phrases that specify origin, source material,

Etymology: The word derives from Old English fram, meaning "from, away from," and is related to cognates

Computing and data contexts: In programming languages, from introduces imports in Python (for example, from math

In culture and media: "From" is also used as a title for works, including a 2022 American

or
a
point
of
departure.
It
is
used
in
various
fixed
constructions
and
can
form
transitions
in
clauses
that
describe
movement,
provenance,
or
transfer.
in
other
Germanic
languages,
such
as
Old
Norse
frá.
The
modern
form
"from"
crystallized
in
the
evolution
from
Old/Middle
English.
import
sqrt)
and
serves
a
similar
role
in
other
languages
for
naming
origins
of
data
or
modules.
In
SQL,
the
FROM
clause
specifies
the
source
table
from
which
to
retrieve
data.
horror
television
series.
Beyond
titles,
the
term
is
widely
used
across
literature,
film,
and
music
to
convey
origin,
source
material,
or
a
starting
point
in
storytelling
and
analysis.