Example sentences of "[conj] [vb -s] from the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 deictic : a. gestural b. symbolic 2. non-deictic : c. non-anaphoric d. anaphoric These difficulties are compounded when the phenomenon of deictic projection , or shifts from the egocentric centre , are taken into account ; and they are further multiplied by the interaction of the semantics of non-deictic categorizations of ( especially ) space and time with deictic modifiers .
2 A total of 158 taxa have been identified as pollen , spores , or macrofossils from the Outer Hebrides .
3 It frequently happens that a daughter lives with a widowed parent for 20 years or more ; if the parent changes council houses or moves from the private sector to a council house within one year of the death of the parent then on the death of the parent the council house will be the home which contains all the furniture and other articles which form part of the home and have been fitted into the council house by the parent and the daughter .
4 There is a web of exhilarating approaches — from Ribblehead ; Crummackdale ; Ingleton via Crina Bottom House and Hill Inn in Chapel-le-Dale ; but a particular favourite is a circular route that starts from the charming hamlet of Clapham and visits the most fascinating parts of the area .
5 The nut itself is a curious thing that grows from the so-called cashew apple , and both are filled with a nasty acid fluid that causes dermatitis .
6 The one part of this walk that I dislike is the short but sodden path that leads from the rough lane out of Marsett towards Stalling Busk .
7 a hot dry wind that blows from the Arabian desert .
8 ADDAMS FAMILY ( Columbia TriStar ) Efficient entertainment that benefits from the biggish-budget treatment and some neat casting choices — notably Angelica Huston as Morticia .
9 The causal thread that reaches from the perceived object to the perception and on from that to the overt activity of the perceiver symbolizes the ontological homogeneity of the world .
10 Alternatively , ascend Middlefell Buttress and continue directly up the hillside above to intercept the level path that originates from the New Dungeon Ghyll Hotel ( 1 hour ) .
11 But what we find in the resurrection of Jesus is not something that originates from the natural processes of life , but something that constitutes a unique event .
12 This goes down its throat and into a pouch that opens from the top wall of its gut .
13 The researchers can dip into a collection that ranges from the early days of photography to current events .
14 Oxbridge institutions , though , were slow to respond to such trends and it was only towards the end of the century that calls from the ancient universities to accept a " national " role began to be heeded .
15 Here I have found the mod that touches the seam of melancholy that is within most Welshmen , a melancholy that derives from the dark hills , the heavy clouds and the enveloping sea mists .
16 Seen now , these early British films still have a feeling of freshness and spontaneity that derives from the natural performances of non-actors , and a loose approach to framing which allows interesting material to get in at the edge of the picture .
17 The central theological question is whether the picture of the Devil that emerges from the New Testament is true and necessary for a proper understanding of the Christian story .
18 Investors have been expecting whatever government that emerges from the general elections on June 6th to lower interest rates and devalue the peseta , in order to revive Spain 's flagging economy .
19 6.4 There is again a significant prediction about syntactic behaviour that follows from the above account ; once again , we have in these adjectives a group which will be excluded from predicative position .
20 Furthermore , two-earner couples enjoy greater allowances ( 2.6SA ) than single-earner couples ( 1.6SA ) , a provision that dates from the Second World War when there was a policy to encourage married women to work .
21 A line of pigmentation that extends from the pubic hair to the navel in all but the most fair-skinned of women .
22 ‘ He keeps them from seeing the light shining on them , the light that comes from the Good News about the glory of Christ ’ ( 2 Cor.
23 HAPPINESS is a conditioned reflex that comes from the right thoughts .
24 More importantly , this collection is about aspiring to a perfection of form , the inherent rush that comes from the simple juxtaposition of notes .
25 For example , a fifth of all adult casualties are at or near pedestrian crossings , whilst the disproportionate danger to children that comes from the residential street environment has already been discussed .
26 SPORTING blue berets and Uzi submachineguns as they hurtle along in their spanking new vehicles , 1,000 Italian soldiers have started to patrol the 300-kilometre ( 190-mile ) road that runs from the Mozambican port of Beira westward to landlocked Zimbabwe .
27 There are now several benefits — family credit , free school meals , housing benefit and grants from the Social Fund , for example — that can help families in financial need , but the processes of application and appeal for these are complex enough to warrant the assistance of social workers in many instances .
28 Usually they cleared underbrush and weeds from the rubber groves from one o'clock until sunset , but the new quotas ordered by Duclos that morning meant they had to tap and collect from more than a hundred extra trees through the hot afternoon although their energies were largely spent .
29 Crawford returned to repertory work to be there for the first three months , appearing alongside stars such as Leo McKern , who had turned down two films and offers from the National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company to go to Nottingham , and classical actor John Neville , who had just starred in Alfie on the London stage and was giving up 200-a-week West End rates for the 20 to 50 Playhouse level .
30 It 's worth recording that alongside NRA 's regular monitoring of ICI 's ‘ consent ’ discharges , ICI itself carries out nearly two thousand analyses each month on contents from its outfalls and drains from the three Teesside production sites .
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