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

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1 Sadness comes from the incessant playing of the primeval recordings of the mind ; and these recordings are not noise alone but they are like films of horror .
2 The only counter-pressure comes from the dark side of human nature , the tear of ‘ the enemy ’ .
3 ‘ I think the sense of camaraderie among rock musicians comes from the traditional thing of playing together and sitting in on sessions , ’ elaborates Liam .
4 Finance comes from the recent sale of land near the track for industrial development .
5 The Lofthouse and Middlesmoor Prize Band played a selection of music ; a note in the feast programme remarked on the fact that the band comes from the upper end of Nidderdale , from which dale hailed the Netherdale Singers , who were paid five shillings — according to the church accounts — for appearing at Burnsall Feast in 1740 .
6 The problem comes from the apparent immunity of so many other characters .
7 Whether this comes from the apparent tolerance in the Eastern religions or from the Western dismissal of absolutes , the relativism of modern truth has a strongly corrosive effect on historic Christian conviction .
8 James Baker expressed on Aug. 10 the US view that Resolution 661 gave " the legal authority necessary to constitute such an embargo or blockade , provided the request comes from the legitimate government of Kuwait " .
9 It is called Kulta and it comes from the distant reaches of Lapland .
10 ‘ He keeps them from seeing the light shining on them , the light that comes from the Good News about the glory of Christ ’ ( 2 Cor.
11 Charles perhaps still more than his father regarded St Denis as both personal and dynastic patron ; and though the earliest evidence of this comes from the early years of his own reign , it was surely rooted in childhood habits .
12 The children come from East and West Sussex , although to my astonishment there 's one who comes from the far reaches of West Sussex , right away over erm the other side of Chichester .
13 Again , the term comes from the earliest attempts at explaining the disorder .
14 In my view the central threat to the countryside comes from the sheer numbers of people who want to buy a piece of it .
15 A good theatrical director knows that aggression comes from the right wing of a stage .
16 More importantly , this collection is about aspiring to a perfection of form , the inherent rush that comes from the simple juxtaposition of notes .
17 One salutary study linking stress to accelerated ageing comes from the Canadian Institute of Stress in Toronto .
18 The most interesting evidence , however , comes from the ditched enclosures in the Little Spittle suburb .
19 The power comes from the forward movement of the entire body and the thrust from the rear leg , which is kept straight .
20 The plan comes from the powerful Association of Metropolitan Authorities with the aim of cutting road accidents .
21 The damsel in question comes from the other side of the family — it 's Great-Grandma Rosenbloom , at age eighteen . ’
22 This particular guitar comes from the first phase of the Les Paul Custom , the single-coil era of 1954 to 1957 .
23 Part of the evidence comes from the fascinating phenomenon of ‘ introns ’ and ‘ exons ’ .
24 Support for this explanation comes from the geographical distribution of the feral dog population , concentrated in central and southern Italy .
25 That comes from the Official Report of the twenty sixty of May last year , column three hundred and forty-five .
26 During the pressing operation , the first juice to emerge from a grape is called the cuvée and it comes from the central zone of pulp .
27 The family comes from the central region of Annam , I believe .
28 Indeed , if you go back to his grandfather 's generation , they go right underground , for Bill Larnach comes from the solid traditions of the Durham miners .
29 Table E8.1 comes from the 1987 Digest of UK Energy Statistics ( Table 63 ) .
30 He first published a short history at the beginning of the century , but the passage quoted comes from the enlarged edition of 1923 .
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