Example sentences of "[adj] from [art] [noun pl] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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31 | Had we been as free from the fetters of manpower planning as Field when we negotiated the new deal the problem could have been solved overnight . |
32 | In this he stated his loyalty to the ‘ Church of England , whose faith and government and worship are … free from the extremes of irreverence and superstition … and which I firmly believe to be a sound part of the Church universal ; and which teaches me charity to those who dissent from me ’ . |
33 | So it will be quite separate from the amounts of money that you are receiving from the erm Paymaster General 's Office . |
34 | They are also exempt from the demands of examination passing , assessment , and certification , that I believe have a more distorting effect in the teaching of literature than in other academic areas . |
35 | Pantisocracy had not emerged unharmed from the weeks of separation . |
36 | In the initial post-operative period patients may be drowsy from the effects of anaesthesia or analgesia . |
37 | or tried to cut loose from the coils of law . |
38 | Thus an inductivist rationalist might rule that astrology is not a science because it is not inductively derivable from the facts of observation , whilst a falsificationist might rule that Marxism is not scientific because it is not falsifiable . |
39 | At death a series of rites enabled the pharaoh himself to become Osiris and thereby safe from the depredations of time . |
40 | These exemplars were chosen to reflect a range of different traffic situations within each junction and were intended to be representative of the full set of 28 films of each junction available from the drives in Study 1 . |
41 | It is apparent from the findings of fact that the justices made no findings , or if they did they did not record them , as to whether ( i ) the child was likely to abscond from any other description of accommodation , or ( ii ) that if he absconded he would be likely to suffer significant harm . |
42 | That the section did not operate to prevent parental consent remaining effective , as well in the case of a child over 16 as in the case of a child under that age , is apparent from the words of subsection ( 3 ) . |
43 | Those who can not afford to go to many concerts or buy records , or who live far from the centres of music-making , can hear much good orchestral music by radio . |
44 | Protest was immediate and desperate from the wives of farm workers and miners . |
45 | The difficulties which arise from this structure are familiar from the debates in feminism , where , woman , seems to be offered an alternative of either being the ‘ other ’ as constituted by man , that is , conforming to the stereotypes of patriarchy , or , if she is to avoid this , of being an absolute ‘ other ’ outside knowledge , necessarily confined to inarticulate expressions of mysticism or jouissance . |
46 | Washed clean from the workings of water , and shaken to relaxation , we sleep like babies under the all-night bulb vigil . |
47 | Today , benefiting from psychoanalytic insights , we would probably say that man was distinguishable from the beasts by virtue of his possession of a highly evolved and differentiated ego , and still more by his acquisition of the superego . |
48 | A common criticism of academic journals in education is that the articles they contain are remote from the concerns of classroom teachers . |
49 | Smaller raids which followed on the south-German cities of Munich , Augsburg , and Nuremberg , had a disproportionate psychological effect in demonstrating the extent of allied air supremacy in the capacity to reach so far south , and in illustrating that few could now consider themselves immune from the dangers of bombing . |
50 | Have we not seen that producers are entrepreneurs who can neverbe immune from the forces of competition ? |
51 | Perhaps this is a way of saying that no one is immune from the feelings of attraction towards being merged in a group , or in a commune , a nation , a religious community , a political movement . |
52 | The professional ideal for the discipline was constituted as the achievement of a complete " personality " ; a quality and character understood to be inalienable , and therefore immune from the mutabilities of style , manner , vocabulary , and imagery . |
53 | Of course it by no means follows that the courts themselves are any less immune from the risks of unfairness or inefficiency in their pursuit of policy objectives , especially as currently constituted . |
54 | In addition , Derry was a provincial town , distant from the corridors of power where lobbying could be carried out and it was not a natural locus for a pressure group like NICRA . |