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The phrase "a wire from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a wire that originates from a specific source or location.
Example: "I found a wire from the old telephone system that needs to be removed."
Alternatives: "a cable from" or "a line from".
Exact(60)
I had not been here a day when I received a wire from Maria.
Scarlett Johansson unplugs a wire from the back of her neck.
He ran a wire from a palm-size motor to a five-inch tall propeller.
He laid a wire from there to a tape player we would keep with us.
One such instrument has a roller block that couples the front of the instrument to a wire from the vessel.
The American correspondent for an English news syndicate just showed us a wire from his boss in London.
When the Fairy steps onto a metal plate pulled by a wire from the wings, she should seem to glide in arabesque while stationary on the plate.
We took your case direct to the firm, and it has now connected you – by running a wire from the exchange.
A wire from a hostess to a girl she was to entertain over the weekend; "Can not get Bruce bring boy friend if you desire love".
Nearby, in the family's round felt tent, the boy's father ran a wire from a satellite dish to a big-screen television.
Getting set to send a wire from the Western Union office in Grand Central Station the other day, a friend of ours glanced about for a message pad and was unnerved by the first one his eyes lighted upon.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com