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"can help from" is not a grammatically correct phrase in written English.
A more correct phrase would be "can help with," "can benefit from," or "can receive help from." Here is an example of the correct usage: "The tutoring program can help students with their academic progress."
Exact(12)
You can help from here".
You can help from home, you don't have to put yourself in danger".
There are things, however, that can help from the outside while the inside is given proper consideration.
How to Talk to Kids About Race: Books and Resources That Can Help, from Brightly, a book recommendation website with Penguin Random House.
Even if the responsibility for shaping the immediate future of clean energy falls to national governments, Copenhagen can help from the policy debate, argues Mark R. Pinto, the chief technology officer of Applied Materials, in Santa Clara., Calif., which makes equipment for manufacturing solar products.
The article's findings inspired us to list ideas that round up a range of Times resources from recent years on keeping the brain in shape at any age — and gave us an excuse to highlight interesting Times multimedia that can help, from online tests of focus and memory to interactive Rock-Paper-Scissors and trivia games.
Similar(47)
In this way, ASGARD can help researchers from any field of biology that need sequence data from these arthropods.
You can help yourself from the caldron on the stove.
Or you can help yourself from a generous buffet.
But it can help you from feeling older.
Dessert is sorted too: campers can help themselves from the cherry, apple and plum trees.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com