Example sentences of "[noun] [vb -s] from [art] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ( The word booze comes from the same source . )
2 The information which appears on Skymaster comes from the same computers at Heathrow which churn out the printed stuff so you can guarantee that the data is accurate and changes reach you faster than they normally would on the paper system .
3 In part this reflects a reluctance to let outsiders interfere with the job of policing , as well as a suspicion about soci — ology , which for many policemen sounds too much like the word ‘ socialist ’ ; social work suffers from the same association .
4 These sources include articles and official statements published in ACCOUNTANCY , course and conference notes from the few delegates that still attend external training , and letters and reports already produced within the firm as part of normal client service work .
5 ‘ Of course we thought about political problems , but everyone in Israel suffers from the same ones , ’ says Igor , a railway engineer studying at the Mevasseret ulpan .
6 The time span of observation in these studies varies from a few minutes to several hours .
7 Mandrake comes from the same family as the potato ( once thought to be endowed with aphrodisiac powers itself ) .
8 It is not a tuck stitch at all , but the name comes from the same term used in dressmaking , where woven fabric is stitched , or tucked , into ridges that look much like this fabric .
9 Much of the machinery dates from the latter part of the 19th century , as evidenced by the extensive use of iron parts .
10 His success as a captain comes from the same streak in his character .
11 In stark contrast to the USA where legislation stems from the latter part of the nineteenth century , anti-monopoly or competition policy was virtually non-existent within the UK prior to 1948 .
12 check batch numbers on rolls to make sure each roll comes from the same batch , and that colours will match .
13 This neat orderliness has been attacked by Le Page and Tabouret-Keller , who write ( 1985 : 198 ) : Such a model necessarily implies a linear sequence of varieties within " a language " , with the implication that all innovation starts from the same source and travels in the same direction ; and that innovation in phonology is paralleled by a similar sequence of innovation in different parts of the grammar and lexicon .
14 The dome dates from the same time as the courtyard façades , that is from 1770 , but the fine clock and golden grille are from the Rudolfian period .
15 Further important subsurface information comes from the several boreholes put down in the search for coal by the Department of Commerce on the advice of the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland .
16 But there may not be any tax to pay on it if the pension comes from a former employer of hers , and if she has a National Insurance retirement pension from her own contributions the special ‘ wife 's earned income allowance ’ will be due .
17 Gamble argues that the adversary politics thesis over-generalises from a few instances to the whole of economic policy .
18 The Northern Echo , based in Darlington , Co Durham , yesterday said it had received pictures of 150 terrorist suspects from a former soldier who said he wished to illustrate ‘ shambles ’ of Ulster security .
19 We used to get our hay rakes from the same firm , and they were so beautifully made — light and easy to work with .
20 Statement C starts from the same premise , but is an even more explicit version of a teleology of the oppressed .
21 It is uncertain whether the coffee plant manufactures this chemical for its own mysterious purpose , or whether it is made as an accidental byproduct of the roasting process ( the smell of coffee originates from the latter source ) .
22 Friends of the Earth comes from the same womb as Greenpeace , the Sierra Club .
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