Example sentences of "[Wh pn] [modal v] [verb] from [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Requests are often received from Doctors , Hospitals , Social Workers , or from a friend or neighbour who knows of someone who may benefit from the service . |
2 | Moreover , when Special Hospital patients stay too long , places do not become available for others who might benefit from a place and the result is large numbers of seriously mentally ill long-term prisoners held in maximum security jails . |
3 | Some districts have traditional NHS inpatient units and outpatient clinics , but these fell out of favour when studies of outcome revealed that they were not particularly effective and were not reaching a sufficiently wide range of drinkers who might benefit from the service . |
4 | May I , once again , ask anyone who knows of someone who could benefit from a grant to please let us know . |
5 | But there are many more thousands who could benefit from the club . |
6 | As an amateur ornithologist he knew himself to be far behind those people who could identify from a snatch of song or flicker of a wing . |
7 | ‘ More like Beorn , ’ he said , ‘ the skin-changer in The Hobbit who could turn from a man to a bear . ’ |
8 | Ordinary mortals , however , can visit the area overland by a two-mile circular walk from Bullpot Farm that will give them a hint — but not more than a hint — of the marvels beneath their feet and an appreciation of the bravery of the adventurers who dare to descend from the safety and assurance of daylight into a nether world of total and perpetual blackness . |
9 | But Edward had a more substantial motive for planning an invasion of Normandy : his strategy was to take the pressure off Lancaster in Aquitaine by providing a diversion in Normandy and another in Flanders , were Sir Hugh Hastings had been appointed Lieutenant and given the command of Flemish troops who would advance from the north against Philip . |
10 | However , these were generally riskier and since many savers lacked the necessary information and confidence to invest overseas , it seemed a natural role for investment trusts that they should provide an indirect route into overseas markets for small investors who would benefit from the trust 's professional management . |
11 | I tried to find out — I may be forgiven — who would benefit from the theft of the jewel , and I learned from Mr Brown here ’ ( heads swivelling ) ‘ that Mrs Stratton was always slightly mysterious — ambivalent , even about her own financial affairs . |
12 | Who would think from the urbanity of this week 's column that I am sitting at my keyboard shivering , sniffing , coughing and streaming like a tubercular poet of the 1890s ? |
13 | ‘ The management of complexity is the key problem of our era , ’ Lucky said , ‘ and the people who will benefit from the computer revolution are those who are comfortable with complexity . |
14 | Those of us who live in north-east Kent have always believed that there should be a fast link , and we have been perfectly happy for it to go through south London , to where our constituents who will benefit from the link wish to travel . |
15 | This degree is an exciting new venture , and I see myself as the first of many lay people who will benefit from the training here ’ . |
16 | The new clause is undoubtedly good news for the group of students who will benefit from the closing of what the Minister described as the student gap — I believe that the Government 's estimate is 200,000 . |
17 | He said : ‘ We have a lot of old people who will benefit from the pedestrianisation of the High Street but I fear people will come round on bikes and pinch bags from poor defenceless old ladies . |
18 | A Japanese on the board will probably be a business school graduate with extensive overseas experience , who will speak from a position of strength . |
19 | The young people , who will walk from the City Hall to arrive at Cornmarket at 7.30pm , have dedicated themselves to promoting a non-violent solution . |
20 | Reference has been made to services to King 's Cross for passengers who will travel from the north and other parts of England and from the continent . |
21 | But the fact is that the government is looking for a huge expansion in student numbers nationally and we at Birmingham are keen to play our part , not least because we know that there are many more people who can benefit from a university education ( as you have done ) than are able to at present . |
22 | She has moved from Arrow , and is just the sort of author who can benefit from a change of publisher , for she has been slipping a little recently . |
23 | Is it effective in selecting employees who can do the job or pupils who can learn from the course ? |
24 | We , the readers , are the only ones who can learn from the story : the characters have already lost everything . |