Example sentences of "[verb] [noun prp] from [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The result was urban chaos but a richness of building styles which redeemed Brighton from the overbearing formality of its more classical contemporaries . |
2 | But Webb 's strict ethical judgement that , once the couple had been pronounced man and wife , Benjamin was not entitled to put them asunder , disregards the fact that Benjamin has rescued Elaine from a loveless marriage before it is consummated . |
3 | On Oct. 20 the ANC and PAC excluded AZAPO from the convening committee of the conference , but invited it to participate in the meeting . |
4 | The Labour leadership is under pressure from its own MPs to vote against the bill on third reading because the Maastricht Treaty exempts Britain from the social chapter . |
5 | The amendment seeks to delete the protocol that exempts Britain from the social chapter and , if selected for debate , could muster sufficient support from Tory rebels to blow a hole in the legislation . |
6 | It was easy to make fun of , and it was no wonder that Conservative Central Office had a field day , distributing a compilation of green policy statements , including the unrealistic ones on replacing the EC with a ‘ loose federation of ecological countries ’ and disengaging Britain from the international money market . |
7 | The FOR SALE notice nailed to Lord Jim 's funnel saddened her and if possible she approached Grace from the other direction . |
8 | He caught HIV from a casual encounter , did n't realise and they patched up the row . |
9 | RUGBY LEAGUE chief executive Maurice Lindsay has defended the International Board 's decision to exclude Wales from the 1995 World Cup . |
10 | RUGBY LEAGUE chief executive Maurice Lindsay has defended the International Board 's decision to exclude Wales from the 1995 World Cup . |
11 | In time to come , will someone else walk these halls and remember the Wolfqueen who lived here for a time , but who brought the Cruithin out of hiding , and drove Medoc from the Bright Palace ? |
12 | In the days when Romanians were still in a mood to tell jokes , they used to ask a rhetorical question : how long would it take for a Soviet expeditionary force to reach Bucharest from the Soviet border ? |
13 | Britain will use its presidency to get other EC heads to agree to exempting Denmark from a single currency and a European ‘ army ’ , he told Danish Foreign Minister Uffe Ellemann-Jensen . |
14 | And one rustle of the packet wakes Darren from the deepest sleep . |
15 | Nahum 's happiness was infectious and his gesture of conciliation had saved Seb from an embarrassing situation . |
16 | A persistent ringing roused Christina from a pleasant dream . |
17 | ‘ Where 's the boy ? ’ roared Brown from the front seat . |
18 | Because Brutus was such an idealistic character he felt that he would have to take important steps towards saving Rome from the evil grasp of Caesar . |
19 | It would have been better , Lissa thought unhappily , if she had avoided Lynx from the very beginning . |
20 | this week its the third round of the coca cola cup … our only survivors are Swindon … they 've got Oldham from the Premier League at the County Ground tomorrow night … kick-off is at seven forty five … |
21 | Few , if any , experts on the subject today would contest that the Messiah expected in Jesus 's era was a largely political figure , intent on redeeming Israel from the Roman yoke . |
22 | In a biting attack on what he acidly calls ‘ a micro climate of organised euphoria ’ , Fumaroli argues that Jacques Lang and François Mitterrand have transformed Paris from a living centre of artistic life into a cultural Disneyland . |
23 | Of these , commencing its odyssey some time after Peter 's death , and with the participation of the Academy of Sciences , the most famous was the Second Kamchatka , or ‘ Great Northern ’ expedition , led by the Danish seaman , Vitus Bering , who was to lend his name to the narrow straits separating Siberia from the American continent at the northern extremity of the Pacific Ocean . |
24 | He patted the bulkhead affectionately , then gave all his attention to manoeuvring the Angharad out of Lee Haven and into the fast-flowing sound which separated Gullholm from the Welsh coast . |
25 | When the original version of ‘ Give You ’ was recorded a year ago , the DJ borrowed Alessandra from a local band . |
26 | A hard disk is preferable although you can run Corncob from a high density floppy . |
27 | A hard disk is preferable although you can run Corncob from a high density floppy . |
28 | Having watched Leeds from an early age when my father was a season ticket holder in the 60's , I have been through the good times and the bad times . |
29 | As Eisenman demonstrates , the legitimacy of the high priesthood — of Zadok or of the Zadok — was resuscitated by the Maccabeans , the last dynasty of Judiac kings , who ruled Israel from the second century B.C. until Herodian times and the Roman occupation . |
30 | Moving Waddle from the right wing , where he performed so imaginatively against the Italians , in order to accommodate Rocastle , whose form has been patchy all season , is another selection open to doubt . |