Example sentences of "[verb] move from the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 EURO DISNEY has moved from the realms of make-believe to become reality .
2 The discussion in this section has moved from the consideration of the composition of Parliament , and the nature of the relationship of government to Parliament , to a more detailed account of the agencies concerned with policy making .
3 Modesty has moved from the organ of ambition .
4 The exhibition ‘ Western painting from the sixteenth to the twentieth century from the Bremen Kunsthalle Collection ’ , the show of some of the works of art looted at the end of World War II , has moved from the Hermitage in St Petersburg to the All-Russian Museum of Decorative , Applied and Folk Art in Moscow .
5 The number of visitors to Redcar has fallen dramatically according to latest figures and Langbaurgh councillors blame its ‘ invisible ’ tourist information office , which has moved from the seafront to Dundas Street .
6 And finally , a greater diversity of provision , a mixed economy of welfare , is expected to develop and the public social services are expected to move from the role of monopoly provider into that of the ‘ enabling authority ’ who , by developing their purchasing , contracting , and planning role , will in part be providers in a market but will also be those who create a market of care services which takes account of local needs and demands .
7 However , a worthwhile innovation here was to begin with a conference conversation whereby small mixed national groups were asked to produce a list of the key questions that they saw action research as needing to answer , and a summary of how the group envisaged moving from the question to an appropriate answer .
8 The conference concluded that aid to the CIS needed to move from the provision of emergency food and medical aid to a long-term strategy of economic development .
9 This had been defeated and the League began to move from the elaboration of policy to agitation .
10 October marked the moment at which power began to move from the hands of the mass movement , then at full tide , into the hands of an organization determined to exercise control from above .
11 He and Evgenia decided to move from the Lakes to Suffolk , where the East Coast rivers offered a paradise of variety for a coasting sailor and Ransome found that ‘ there were always web-footed children to help with the rigging , or to drink ginger pop ’ .
12 Does he want to move from the city to a farm in Scotland ?
13 In 1858 he had moved from the Governorship of Kurland to a position in the Ministry of State Properties , an institution which had forsaken the sympathy for reform which it had displayed under Kiselev .
14 As well as launching the series , he had launched himself ; he had moved from the ranks of a contributor to the little poetry magazines into the mainstream ; his apprenticeship days were over .
15 There are also a large number of adherents er to my knowledge in Edinburgh , people who have moved from the highlands for work .
16 ‘ In the space of one generation , two hundred million people have moved from the countryside to the cities of Asia , Africa and Latin America ’ ( Hellman 1986 : 216 ) .
17 In Sri Lanka thousand of families have moved from the countryside to the capital Colombo in search of a better life .
18 We need to move from the concepts of knowledge , teaching and learning to the idea of students making their own journey ultimately to a position of intellectual independence .
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