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The phrase "an iPhone from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when specifying the source or origin of the iPhone, such as where it was purchased or who it was received from.
Example: "I received an iPhone from my friend as a birthday gift."
Alternatives: "an iPhone that I got from" or "an iPhone I purchased from".
Exact(46)
An average album of 12 tracks stored on an iPhone from Apple's own iTunes music store or Apple Music takes up around 90MB of storage.
Never mind that Mr. Icahn would probably not know an iPhone from a Galaxy S4.
jumpers drop an iPhone from 1,000 feet to demonstrate the effectiveness of its padding.
Here's a video of the Behar-Christie exchange that I took with an iPhone from the back of the room.
"Hi, everyone, I'm geohot," he said, referring to his online handle, then whisked an iPhone from his pocket.
We have another winner – Holly Rogers has won a cool amplifier for an iPhone from Not on the High Street.
Similar(14)
For example if you want a iPhone from your parents.
I asked him how shooting with an iPhone differed from the way he usually makes photographs.
But there is an iPhone app from AAA just for this eventuality.
The Druid Oracle Cards is an iPhone app from Philip Carr-Gomm, the chief of the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids.
"I don't buy it that it is just a simple matter of the meter not showing the right amount of signal strength," said Bryan Hurst, of Hackettstown, N.J., who upgraded last week to an iPhone 4 from an iPhone 3GS.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com