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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a television from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when specifying the origin or source of a television, such as where it was purchased or manufactured.
Example: "I bought a television from the local electronics store last weekend."
Alternatives: "a TV from" or "a television made by".
Exact(17)
They were cleared of stealing a television from Currys at Stonelake retail park.
With the money that was left, she bought a new fridge and a television from the duty-free when she came home after five years.
A grandmother in a rural part of North Korea was given a television from her grandson who worked in an urban area.
One night, an inmate threw a television from the floor above – it landed inches from where John was standing and he had a panic attack.
Lorriane McGrane, 19, from Peckham, south-east London, a Territorial Army soldier, argued against her 13-month jail term for stealing a television from an Argos store in Bermondsey, south London.
If you give in to the silence — remember, there's no traffic noise as distraction — you'll pick up the faraway echo of footsteps, the hushed garble of a television from behind a shuttered window.
Similar(43)
And that information can be from a book, a piece of paper, a television show, from the doctor, from a variety of sources.
And that's what turns a television critic from an accountant into an evangelist.
To my right was the lens of a television camera from a national cable network.
Eighty-eight percent of the parents surveyed said they owned a television, down from 95 percent in 2010.
Police officers watch a ballgame on a television suspended from the ceiling.
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