Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] from [art] [noun] ['s] " in BNC.

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1 But though this may quell doubts about the benefits of the existence of large-scale enterprise , it does not bear on the point that where competition is attenuated a policy of profit maximisation may not be wealth maximising : society might be better served if companies were to lower price and increase output , even though this would be less profitable from the company 's point of view .
2 It was so different from the artist 's usual work that without the bold signature , the single surname , Dalgliesh might have wondered if it was , in fact , his work .
3 They were so different from the dustman 's horses and those that pulled the water carts .
4 Evidently Luke 's own assessment of the problem 's urgency was somewhat different from the caller 's own .
5 For Sue Poole , whose husband Nick is a Sergeant , living here is somewhat different from the family 's home town of Tewkesbury .
6 He was able to track down a lot of detail about the original construction and decoration — so he could keep the design and get it back to what it was , but incorporate new features , like a Great Hall without all those pillars , which is much better from the customers ' point of view . "
7 But it is not clear from the duke 's company accounts exactly how much of Mayfair he owns .
8 Now the truth of the matter was that Desimir had found Stoja and Stojane the very first day after he had left the king : a beautiful youth and girl living not far from the fairy 's mountain .
9 He looked at my clothes , all creased and still damp from the night 's activities .
10 ‘ Let's stay here tonight , Angel , ’ said Tess , lying down on a flat stone which was still warm from the day 's sunshine .
11 The findings are actually somewhat more encouraging from the Tories ' point of view than they appear on the surface .
12 However , more discouraging from the District 's standpoint was the development by the Cambridge Board of its Rural Areas Committee policies for the region .
13 It was still tender from the soldier 's abuse , but the pain helped her fight back incipient tears .
14 A scheme , more successful from the settlers ' point of view , was that in part of Ecuadorian Amazonia , where a ‘ settlements first ; roads second ’ philosophy prevailed .
15 Dyer 's doings are the same as but also different from those investigated by the fretful man he resembles , just as Hawksmoor 's investigative Scotland Yard is the same as but also different from the architects ' department of that name attended by Dyer .
16 It remains inherently dependent from the client 's point of view .
17 Copies are also available from the Secretary 's Department .
18 Volatility in aid flows is notoriously difficult from the recipient 's point of view , and the US Congress has made American aid a dangerously-poisoned chalice to the recipients .
19 Such a statement of principle is notably absent from the Government 's proposals .
20 Notably absent from the CBI 's understanding of the problems of inner cities was any notion that they should be met by national economic policy .
21 However , perhaps his best one , and the most important from the club 's point of view , was that of 12 January 1924 when the Palace met and beat the might of Tottenham Hotspur in the ( old ) 1st round of the FA Cup at The Nest .
22 The diagnosis is often obvious from the patient 's history of pre-occupation with dieting and body shape or a relative 's concern about weight-losing behaviour , social withdrawal , and depression .
23 I think it 'll be fairly evident from the question 's erm titles wh what they want .
24 While keeping the same kind of security of tenure structure … it was made far weaker from the tenant 's point of view than under the 1977 Rent Act .
25 Alice Wilson 's cellar dwelling with its brick floor ‘ so damp that it seemed as if the last washing could never dry up ’ would not be far distant from the Davenports ' if the nature of that ‘ dampness ’ were defined .
26 Similarly , it may take no more than a momentary pang of empathetic distress to convince me that if I could become as aware from the sufferer 's viewpoint as from my own I would be spontaneously moved to help him even to my own cost .
27 Love it or hate it , the one thing you can never deny about the NME is that — even when it is n't immediately evident from the paper 's contents — we 've always adored music .
28 Tour support advances are invariably recoupable from the artist 's royalty account .
29 The Labour Party has an economic policy which is almost indistinguishable from the Tories ' .
30 But the tone of the report is quite different from the GATT 's previous review , published in 1991 , which was harshly critical .
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