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"from which it comes" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is commonly used to refer to the source or origin of something. Example: "The idea for this project came from a conversation with my colleague, from which it comes my inspiration and motivation to pursue it."
Exact(33)
Each entry is weighed by a function that associates every word with its importance to the text from which it comes and within the whole corpus.
Its colour varies according to the waters from which it comes.
It is day two of Lightning In a Bottle, the festival that has brought West Coast-flavored electronic music and the psychedelic culture from which it comes to tens of thousands of attendees in its 14 year run.
The main defect of a full-thickness free-skin graft is that, unless it is very small, the donor site from which it comes becomes a defect that needs to be closed in its own right and may itself need skin grafting.
Answering it correctly will reveal the Times article from which it comes.
It changes flavor, loses the bite of alcohol, and regains the mildness of the grape from which it comes.
Similar(27)
Frenchman Pierre Pomet included this illustration of a bezoar -- cross-sectioned to reveal its core -- and the goat from which it came in his 17th century guide to medicinal drugs.
So the water goes right back into the shale from which it came.
In many cases it is put back into the formation from which it came.
But I wanted to return the money to the streets from which it came.
Its admirable melting qualities reduce it frequently to the creamy molten state from which it came.
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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