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Discover LudwigThe phrase "stained from" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use this phrase to refer to something that has been stained as a result of some action or event. For example: "My shirt was stained from the spilled wine."
Exact(54)
Other hazards include black teeth stained from rich red wines.
Instead they were stained from roughly mixed sand.
The ceiling was stained from her cigarette smoke.
Shy and overweight, with teeth stained from smoking, he had difficulty making it through cocktail parties.
Dawn came glassy-orange, stained from below by a gelatinous band of pale green.
Now, the big brick building is vacant, its windows boarded up, its copper cornice stained from years of neglect.
Similar(6)
The coach, his cap mud-stained from having thrown it to the ground several times, stares from midfield toward the goal post.
The ceilings were water-stained from the leaking roof.
Similarly, his jeans are oil-stained from the deep fat fryer.
This week, his thumb still ink-stained from voting, Ram Hari Kafle, a farmer in the hills of Kavre District, said he was pleased that everyone's voice would be heard in drafting a new constitution.
In the book, being published Tuesday by HarperCollins, she described how "hot Israeli movers" shepherded her, "tear-stained," from her former fiancé's "hipster gigantor luminous loft" into the dark third-floor walk-up.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com