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

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1 In the space of only two weeks , the Slovak lawyer has moved from dissident to defendant to government minister .
2 Since his election Dr. Kumar has had regular battles with Mr Bates , who since his narrow defeat has moved from Gateshead to Marton .
3 She did n't seem to be concentrating on the performance because her eyes kept moving from side to side , although she sat very still .
4 Just-in-time management philosophy has moved from manufacturing to the university library sector .
5 It is the number of operations needed to move from x to y if no tile got in the way of any other .
6 The scene was set for the activity of town planning to move from environmentalism to welfarism .
7 The emphasis in the teaching of economics has moved from macro-economics to an emphasis on micro-economics and in particular decision-taking at the level of the firm .
8 Piphros ' head began to move from side to side , the entire body shaking , and oozing moisture .
9 In 1974 , Emerson decided to move from Lotus to McLaren , a move dictated by the kind of restlessness and self-interest which characterize most racing drivers and , more than possibly , by the fact that 1974 was the year in which the multi-million-dollar multinational , Phillip Morris , took over the sponsorship of the McLaren team .
10 Such transformational changes include moving from low-technology to high-technology manufacturing systems , implementing computers and telecommunications , and redesigning the customer interface ( for example , by providing salespeople with lap computers so that they can interact directly with both customers and suppliers ) .
11 The CAA 's Central Library has moved from Kingsway to Aviation House at Gatwick , where it is open for reference and sale of CAA publications from 0930–1630 Monday to Friday .
12 The outfit has moved from losses of around £1.7m in calendar year 1991 , to an as-yet unfinalised figure in the black — which should be well in excess of £1m — for 1992 .
13 Several knights came to Ayrshire , one being Walter Fitzallan , whose father had moved from Normandy to England with William the Conqueror and had fought at the Battle of Hastings .
14 Developed by the Transitions Research Corporation of Connecticut ( owned by Joe Engelberger ) , these refrigerator-sized robots find their way around with the aid of computerised floor maps , and can even , with the help of radio transmitters , use lifts to move from floor to floor .
15 The argument begins to move from economics to politics .
16 Love has to move from idea to reality , and that is always God 's way — the way of incarnation .
17 Rosa had moved from Tucupita to be with her daughter Alicia after the death of Juan 's father in a riding accident .
18 Squash at Harlow Sportcentre has moved from strength to strength , starting with just two courts when the centre first opened .
19 , Josias Christopher ( 1778–1848 ) , chemical manufacturer , was born at Graan Farm , Enniskillen , county Fermanagh , Ireland , August 1778 , the fourth son of David Gamble , whose staunch Presbyterian ancestors had moved from Ayrshire to Ireland for religious reasons during the reign of James VI .
20 Bombed out of one small premises , Grandpa had moved from factory to factory , finally ending up in what was now Belmodes .
21 At the beginning of each trial food is placed at the end of each arm and the rat left to move from arm to arm , in whatever sequence it chooses , in order to retrieve the food .
22 This was not accidental ; Loeb had moved from Germany to Chicago , where he influenced the young J. B. Watson , who was just starting his research career .
23 And Philip Ziegler has moved from HarperCollins to Sinclair-Stevenson and Mandarin , with his book about London during the Second World War ; publication will be in 1995 and the agent is Diana Baring at Curtis Brown .
24 A third way in which the courts have moved from considerations of procedural form to substance , is by interpreting the concept of fairness as allowing them to consider , in a general sense , whether the decision reached was fair and reasonable .
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