Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] from " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The last two releases in the Kings Quest series received a fairly mixed reception , and since the heady days when Sierra WERE GRAPHIC ADVENTURES there have been some very strong releases from the likes of Lucasfilms ( Loom , Secret of Monkey Island I and II , Indiana Jones ) , Westwood ( Legend of Kyrandia ) , and even some of the Role Playing Games from Origin ( Ultima VII and Ultima Underworlds ) and Sir Tech ( Crusaders of the Dark Savant ) .
2 At the end of the day it 's a political decision from the council of ministers , but it seems to be going there with a firm endorsement of support from the commission . ’
3 They will ‘ see ’ the woman who is crying as herself and not as some emotional ghost from the past .
4 If we plan a burglary between us at least it makes us think about the , the sort of things that we need to look at our houses , to stop that burglary from
5 It shows what they saw as the moral careers of ‘ successful ’ and ‘ unsuccessful ’ immigrant and the spatial progress from back region to front regions which is bound up with these careers .
6 Japan was not militarily involved in the conflict between the two Koreas and their backers during 1950–3 , but reaped considerable economic advantage from US military spending .
7 Held at the Newton Davis Hall , Froyle , courtesy of Lord Mayor Treloar College , the concert featured eight musicians from the world famous Yehudi Menuhin School , and the expertise of radio and television broadcaster Martin Muncaster as master of ceremonies .
8 The mercenary captain John of Hainault brought a force of 500 men-at-arms from the Low Countries , and at York they became involved in a violent affray with a band of archers from Lincolnshire , which culminated in the deaths of a sizeable number of the Lincolnshire men .
9 To this end we all need to be engaged in a programme of progressive disengagement from injury to animals .
10 The progressive disengagement from extra-academic concerns , particularly at the level of cultural policy , is best revealed by the Review 's approach over this whole period to the study of language .
11 They will need extensive support from N C V O and other groups , er , to be able to undertake that task .
12 A very prosaic theory proposes that the electrical activity of the brain as we sleep produces the mental equivalent of white noise and that , just as we can make ourselves hear music in white noise , our unconscious can pick out a coherent story from the baffling array of visual images presented to it .
13 The man had spent about thirty minutes behind the wheel of a Land Rover Discovery like this one … they 'd followed Geoff 's normal route from Banbury to the village of Mollington , onto Cropredy , then back into Banbury .
14 The Columnist of the Year award went to former MP Matthew Parris of The Times for his political sketches from the House of Commons and his regular column .
15 The foundation of victory was laid on a solid base from the pack which outweighed , outreached and outwitted the Welsh eight .
16 A settled domestic life with two year-old Daniel and the lovely former actress Suzanne Danielle provided the supremely talented Scot with a secure and solid base from which to plan his survival from decline which saw him slump to 51st in the 1988 Order of Merit .
17 A teaching profession with a better understanding and a wider knowledge of educational research would be more able to question those who indulge in ‘ jargon ’ and also have a solid base from which to put forward their views which , whether rightly or wrongly , still rely too heavily on intuitive feel for what is happening , and I feel confident that the STRN can help bring this about if Scottish teachers give it the support it deserves .
18 More popular papers , however , like Reynold 's News were starting to give football ample coverage from the mid-1880s .
19 Fernando eased her back to the ground , smoothed her tear-dampened hair from her flushed cheeks .
20 With the drop in agricultural support from the EC and with the policy of Set Aside taking land out of farming production , local farmers should be encouraged to use their spare land in Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty more sensitively .
21 The new guidelines are bound to cause controversy because they effectively transfer the cost of agricultural support from the Ministry of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food to the NCC and the national parks ' authorities , whose budgets are already stretched to breaking point .
22 When applicable , Taylor 's hypothesis ( Section 19.4 ) can be used to derive a spatial spectrum from an observed time spectrum .
23 ( Their complete records will be available in due course from the Secretary/Manager ) .
24 ‘ To appreciate the real position , the relative size of costs in ( CAA headquarters at ) Gatwick and ( JAA Headquarters at ) Hoofdorp have to be taken into account , as well as the benefits that will stem in due course from the JAA-wide applicability of Certificates and Approvals .
25 The Library of Congress Catalog and printed card service , and the weekly , monthly , quarterly , annual and subsequent cumulations of British National Bibliography , plus its own printed card service , derive from this data base , and it is hoped to begin experiments towards the provision of a similar computer store of catalogue data on audio-visual materials in due course from which all manner of useful selected print-outs can be derived .
26 Another much earlier Hercules scene in a lively and highly naturalistic manner is on a silver-gilt phiale from the Thracian treasure hoard from Rogozen , Bulgaria , dated to c .
27 This may be because the ‘ classic ’ factories of the twentieth century tend to be low-rise , usually single-storey structures , built to very broad plans from cheap and impermanent materials .
28 Just as I realised that we would have to abort our manoeuvre in view of the ship 's overhanging davits there was a loud exclamation from the man on deck , " I say , Cynthia , the captain 's got a blasted parrot on his shoulder . "
29 For generations Stoddard Templeton have selected only the very finest yarns from all over the world .
30 The great French historian , Fernand Braudel , in his massive Civilisation and Capitalism traces , among much else , the gradual shift northwards and westwards of European banking from its beginnings in central Italy in the thirteenth century .
  Next page