Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv] from [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Britain can glean much from the Australian experience .
2 Let your tack dry away from a direct source of heat ; do n't put it in front of a radiator or fire , or the leather will become brittle .
3 The strict parent or the sarcastic schoolteacher may act more from a suppressed need to hurt than from his or her desire for discipline or wish to be thought amusing .
4 But individual and group behaviour may deviate considerably from the declared goals of the organization , as in the case of punishment-oriented warders in reform and rehabilitation-oriented custodial institutions ; or racially biased police officials ; or socially biased welfare officials .
5 It is possible that a few minor markets did grow slowly from an earlier village but they are difficult to discover .
6 Nonetheless , manufacturers are still not pushing the business benefits of technology to any great extent — some 80% of those questioned said that bidding vendors had never formally evaluated what they should invest in from a strategic point of view .
7 Active support Joseph could expect only from a small number of officials .
8 It will do so from a common perspective : that is , how might each of them handle what have been seen as necessary imperatives of organizational action ?
9 It is at this point that a right heart attitude would benefit greatly from an intelligent technique .
10 Every child must break away from the parental fold , and establish his own personal identity .
11 Although studying and admiring Tchaikovsky 's methods of composition , Stravinsky felt he could break away from the stereotyped dance forms demanded by nineteenth-century balletmasters , His music was far more economical in melody and orchestral sound but his rhythmic phrasings and marked attention to newer dance forms inspired Ashton to break away from traditional class-room practices .
12 While some students work best with their peers , their classmates might benefit more from the personal attention of their teacher .
13 Instead , they must now battle back from a 2-1 deficit after he punched the Glasgow club 's equaliser into his own net in the first leg of the all-British second round tie .
14 The NI economy is demand-led and based on public expenditure and a recovery in consumer demand in the UK , which will follow on from an export-led recovery , mid-to-late 1994 .
15 ‘ You can see better from the lower door , ’ I remarked , turning to go down the path .
16 This is what I mean by protection — we did not run away from the terrible topic : the use of projection allowed us to face cancer .
17 Of such undertakings all that can be predicated is that some breaches will and others will not , give rise to an event which will deprive the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract ; and the legal consequences of a breach of such an undertaking , unless provided for expressly in the contract , depend upon the nature of the event to which the breach gives rise and do not follow automatically from a prior classification of the undertaking as a " condition " or a " warranty " .
18 He believes that the jets may originate from ‘ dikes ’ — a geological term for tilted strata or layers or others particularly dusty areas which might stick up from the surrounding surface .
19 And as he poked around the undergrowth for hidden poachers , another shot would ring out from the far end of the water .
20 There are two other necessary ingredients , which will normally arise automatically from the first ingredient , self-replication itself .
21 In these hot summer months prudent Japanese girls suppress the potential faux pas of erect nipples that could spring up from a cool blast of the air-conditioner by sticking on a handy pair of ‘ Nipples ’ .
22 The MVA consultancy , transport planning specialists , will move on from the Joint Authorities Transport study in Edinburgh to consider the local effects of public transport and new roads .
23 They consider that you can only move on from an unhappy experience if you have given it some meaning .
24 Martin Postle splices detail and generalisation , so that he can move deftly from a meticulous account of Reynolds ' studio practice to the perceptive observation that ‘ it was not Reynolds ’ style but his lack of style which characterised his work at this time as sitters danced , flirted , embroidered , sacrificed to pagan deities , or merely meditated , in the manner of Guido Reni , Titian , Van Dyck or even Michelangelo ’ .
25 DIXONS Group financial director Tony Dignum will step down from the electrical retailer 's main board early next month but will remain finance director of its shops in Britain and America .
26 After the neighbours and the dinner and the Queen 's speech , depression would set in from the rich food and the gins and tonics .
27 My personal hope is that we shall move away from a formalised dichotonomy of university and non-university institutions , and that there will be a less obvious division : two groups of educational organisations with parity of esteem in the public mind .
28 Henry had always assumed that this was due , on her part , to an entirely natural physical repugnance for him ; she moved away from him as one might move away from a bad smell or a dangerous horse .
29 Let us move away from the special case of solipsism and sensation terms , and consider a case which may seem simpler ( actually it is the hardest case in which to make the point plausible ) .
30 His mouth still quirked in the aftermath of his laughter , and she wished that he would move away from the top step so that she could pass him .
  Next page