Example sentences of "[verb] from one " in BNC.

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1 These mechanisms can not simply be lifted from one society ( and thus from one language via literal translation ) to another .
2 Her left pupil is horribly dilated and blood trickles from one nostril and her hair .
3 One kind , Bathygobius , has the habit of leaping from one pool to another as the tide retreats .
4 But by then , the show-down had come from one of support for the clergyman to one of outright resistance to the regime .
5 This daub could have come from one of three distinct periods .
6 Local residents again pointed out that so far all the dust that had blown had come from one three-acre section of the lake : ‘ The worry is that if it 's not attended to and if the entire 150 acres rise up and start blowing at the same time it could be a national disaster .
7 I had the impression — fleeting , I grant you — that the photo had come from one of the pockets .
8 That would have set them a puzzle , would n't it , if the fibres had come from one of them ? ’
9 John is convinced that most of the houses ghostly happenings are come from one place ; the so-called Bishop 's bedroom .
10 Scotland 's national coach has been disadvantaged only in the sense that so many of his squad come from one club , Rangers , who have had to withdraw six players because of injury .
11 I think that 's that absolutely horrific and that has come from one of the practice partners and not the actual himself .
12 The package also has improved ability to construct hypertext links , so that readers can jump from one part of a document to a linked part with a simple click .
13 Like a ping-pong ball he bounced from one emotion to another , knowing what he wanted but knowing also that it did not exist .
14 We separated private manufacturing and private service establishments where they appeared to differ from one another .
15 Since the information stored is likely to differ from one employee to another , several relational database management systems for personnel records have been developed on micros exclusively for use in personnel applications .
16 The Sheikha rose from one of the couches to greet me .
17 The number of zones with a referral rate below 75/1000 registered patients rose from one ( representing two practices ) to four zones ( 17 practices ) after the guidelines were introduced .
18 An entertaining example of animals solving the same problem as the swimming rats , but with land and water reversed , is the ability of a tide-pool fish , the goby , to jump from one pool to another without landing on the rock between .
19 Other freeholders , however , were less career-motivated , and often showed considerable loyalty to a particular political interest over an extended period of time , and as a generalisation it might be suggested that they were less likely to jump from one interest to another than were the lawyers with judicial preferment in mind .
20 I do n't know , maybe the time was better for making music than it is now , there was less touring , not this hysterical feeling that everyone needs to jump from one place to another , or the lure of too many good orchestras — maybe it 's true that there are now more good orchestras than good conductors .
21 As the sermon wore on and he became more and more excited , he began to jump from one side , first to the middle and , by the time he was in full verbal flight , he managed to leap the entire length of the pulpit .
22 If the tax-transfer system creates a budget constraint that is nonlinear and non-convex , then it is possible for more than one tangency with an indifference curve to arise , and indeed for the same indifference curve to have two tangency points , and small changes in the budget constraint can cause the chosen number of hours to jump from one segment of the constraint to another ( e.g.points 6 and 7 in Fig. 12–2(c) ) .
23 I think to jump from one twenty five to , to two pounds is .
24 The DNA molecule uncoils from one end , the opposite strands separate , the bonds between opposite bases break , and the free nucleotides find their opposite nucleotide on each strand .
25 It was as if a couple of animals hounded from one burrow , nest or lair had im-mediately taken possession of another and started up just where they had left off .
26 The profile of the street remains unchanged , but parking takes the form of stretches of right-angle and alongside parking , alternating from one side of the road to the other every 50 metres or so .
27 The area around Perry Barr Wharf has several industrial areas , alternating from one side of the canal to the other .
28 If the warren and burrow systems are first cleared in the autumn , subsequent work in the area on other systems is likely to lead to rabbits evicted from one set of burrows going to ground elsewhere .
29 The speed at which an awareness of national fashions in architecture grew varied from one area to another .
30 ( 1988 ) was that their S2 varied from one pre-exposure trial to the next .
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