Example sentences of "[noun] [vb pp] from the [num ord] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Analysis of questionnaire and sickness absence data collected from the first phase of the Whitehall II study . |
2 | The Paddy Hancox-trained flyer led from the first flight to win by three lengths in 31.06 secs , clipping an astonishing 27 spots off the record , which had been held by Brough Park 's Jenks Challenger . |
3 | For patients with iterative studies , only mean gastric cell densities obtained from the last set of biopsy specimens or from the gastrectomy specimen were taken in consideration . |
4 | Underlying his pleasure at the success of the new methods and the way in which the jeeps had proved their worth , was Stirling 's anger at the lack of intelligence received from the Eighth Army . |
5 | Orient , like Rovers promoted from the Fourth Division last May , made few telling incursions into the penalty area where they lacked the pace of the home team 's Malkin and Morrissey , though their approach work was neat enough . |
6 | Ingredients obtained from the Third World , providing work and sustenance to underprivileged societies , go into products which are sold to the more fortunate , the profits of which go into her educational programme aimed at making people more aware of the critical issues of our times . |
7 | The first church on the site dated from the 7th century . |
8 | The group — all males — were wearing either knee-length shirts or what looked like the jackets and trousers left from the last church jumble sale . |
9 | Inglis ( 1965 ) summarised data which showed that among individuals with memory defects only the number of items recalled from the second ear differed from the number recalled by normal control subjects , whereas recall from the initial ear was similar for both groups . |
10 | The second word is the noun formed from the first word , the verb . |
11 | For example , 80 per cent of our tin and 75 per cent of our bauxite come from the Third World . |
12 | Such difficulties of interpretation as the modern local historian may encounter are not , however , confined to this class of writing alone , as a single example taken from the sixteenth century will illustrate . |
13 | She had no energy to swim in the water and pull herself out on the small strip of toilet paper left from the last flushing of the toilet . |
14 | In doing this the government was employing techniques perfected from the sixteenth century onwards in the expansion of the Muscovite state towards the Black Sea and the Volga basin . |
15 | The establishment of serfdom conditioned the way in which the relationship between State and society developed from the seventeenth century onwards . |
16 | They had just had the windows repaired from the last volley of stones . |
17 | Once this base had been consolidated , forays would be made deeper into the wilderness , this time , perhaps , with a cossack military unit establishing a blockhouse ( zimove ) to contain the furs collected from the next tribe to be located . |
18 | Berwick Hills Library ( Wednesday afts. ) and Saltburn Community Centre ( Wednesday afts. ) , the courses run from the last week of April for ten weeks . |
19 | In the flush of enthusiasm , if not youthful , at least inexperienced , I set myself in 1960 two major objectives : one was the development of extramural services — ‘ community care ’ was the jargon — which would reduce the incidence of hospital care and counteract the institutionalism of long-stay hospitals ; and the other , not unconnected , was to break down the huge mental hospitals inherited from the nineteenth century . |
20 | Since consumers equate price to marginal benefits derived from the last unit , in general marginal benefit will exceed marginal cost in imperfectly competitive industries . |
21 | Most unskilled labourers were part of the indigenous working-class culture inherited from the nineteenth century . |
22 | Both shows run from the second week in April until 2 May . |