Example sentences of "derive from [art] [adj] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 There can be no doubt , however , from the force and weight of the submissions made to us that there is a considerable body of informed opinion which supports the recommendation of the Crowther Committee and believes that the problems arising in relation to the impact of reservation of title clauses on insolvency are only part of more extensive problems deriving from the unsatisfactory laws concerning security interests in personal property .
2 Throughout the nineteenth century there were faint waves of Adventism , deriving from the Judaic roots at the heart of the Christian faith .
3 ‘ The rights deriving from the above-mentioned provisions of the Treaty include not only the rights of establishment and of participation in the capital of companies or firms but also the right to pursue an economic activity , as the case may be through a company , under the conditions laid down by the legislation of the country of establishment for its own nationals .
4 The new prints still took their inspiration from the past but were more likely to be derived from the printed silks of eighteenth-century Lyons or the pattern books of Victorian designers and architects than the simpler fly leaves of books upon which Laura had formerly relied .
5 In the case of relaxations that occurred before common cavity episodes , the reference basal UOS pressure was derived from the 10 seconds before the onset of the common cavity episode .
6 If specific rates refer to 5-year age groups , we must assume that the rate applies in every year of the group so that the rate derived from the fictitious figures of table 10.5 is
7 The staining of the epithelial cells is cytoplasmic , involving the basolateral and , to a lesser extent , the apical surfaces of the cells and EGF can also be seen in the mucus derived from the glandular ducts in many cases ( Fig 3C and D ) .
8 The balance is derived from the usual sources of membership , donations and sponsors .
9 Firstly , areas of functional competence are usually derived from the practical concerns of care givers rather than from the viewpoint of elders .
10 I shall be returning to these topics below , but at this stage it should be stressed again that the rather more re fined and flexible view of literariness that I have just outlined was derived from the founding principles of Formalism .
11 Now the movements of whole groups of galaxies are providing estimates of W. At Brighton , Avishai Dekel of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and Nick Kaiser of the University of Toronto presented maps derived from the peculiar velocities of galaxies using different methods .
12 Whatever Shakespeare 's source or inspiration , Pistol is a brilliant invention , locked as he is in a verse-form and range of reference derived from the heroical plays in the London theatres of the 1580s and 1590s , as far removed as could be from his debased reality .
13 He painted with the meticulous craft of the Elizabethan limner in a style derived from the elaborate concoctions of mannerist court portraiture ; a style soon to be swept away by the tide of the baroque brought to England from Flanders by Rubens and Sir Anthony Van Dyck [ q.v . ] .
14 Among the ingredients contained in these products are : anise , cantharides ( or ‘ Spanish fly ’ , a chemical derived from the dried bodies of beetles ) , estrogens , fennel , ginseng , golden seal , Korean ginseng , licorice , mandrake , minerals , nux vomica , sarsaparilla , strychnine , testosterone and vitamins .
15 Similar position detector signals can be derived from the freewheeling currents of the other two windings , i.e. freewheeling currents in winding B generate a trigger signal for winding A and winding C currents produce step commands for winding B.
16 Grace is claiming patents for products derived from the natural oils of neem , an evergreen tree , which are used locally for insecticides , contraceptives and soap .
17 Account is taken of their kinetic energies , which involve the masses of the atoms and their instantaneous velocities , and potential energies , which are derived from the instantaneous displacements of the atoms from their equilibrium positions in an assumed force field .
18 The embryonic development of the hypopharynx shows it to be a composite structure derived from the sternal regions of the premandibular and gnathal segments of the head ( e.g. Scholl , 1969 ) .
19 In this chapter , we have assumed the worst possible case — i.e. the syntax/semantics component needs up to ten words of the utterance in order to prefer one of the alternatives — and this is why the statistics are based on the total number of complete word strings derived from the different kinds of input to the lexical access component .
20 Preparation for independence , when it occurred , was seen as a problem of constitution-building according to some model based on principles derived from the domestic experiences of the colonial powers .
21 A full list is given in appendix C. Some symbols derive from the Latin names of the elements ( see table 4.2 ) .
22 John Lyons , for instance , while complaining that ‘ much linguistic theorising is vitiated by the uncritical transference by linguists and philosophers of attitudes which derive from the cultural peculiarities of English and a few other so-called world languages ’ ( 1982 ) , himself goes on to rest part of his view of literacy , implicitly , on exactly such ‘ cultural peculiarities ’ of written English .
23 I want to talk about the use of computers in actual research , and the features of that use which derive from the special characteristics of the humanities .
24 American institutions are more legalistic , adhering to principles enshrined in a written Constitution where all rights derive from the fundamental principles of liberty and equality .
25 His part in Shakespeare 's Macbeth derives from the fanciful tales in Scotorum Historiae ( 1526 ) by Hector Boece or Boethius [ q.v . ] .
26 How formal this take-over was is an open question ; to a large extent the evidence derives from the funerary inscriptions of fifth- and sixth-century bishops , where the epithet defensor civitatis might refer to the dead man 's achievements rather than his office .
27 Seen now , these early British films still have a feeling of freshness and spontaneity that derives from the natural performances of non-actors , and a loose approach to framing which allows interesting material to get in at the edge of the picture .
28 Another important feature of text organization derives from the overlapping notions of genre and text type .
29 Or did his advice derive from the crooked workings of a twisted kind of covetousness — perhaps the kind prohibited by the Ninth Commandment , Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour 's wife , which had always seemed superfluous after the Sixth .
30 Finally , with respect to language issues , a variety of debates are still in progress and it is premature to draw firm conclusions ; however , there is some evidence to suggest that bilingualism may actually enhance educational performance ( Houlton , 1986 ) , that in the case of Afro-Caribbean pupils there may well be ‘ dialect interference ’ , although it is clear too that some of the problems here may derive from the negative attitudes of teachers towards Creole ( Edwards , 1979 ) , and that in the case of some Bangladeshi pupils lack of familiarity with English may be an obstacle to academic achievement ( House of Commons Home Affairs Committee , 1986 ) .
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