Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] [verb] from [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Examination methods and timetables naturally differ from course to course but , in general , candidates are assessed both on written examinations and on course work during the year .
2 The strategies naturally varied from case to case , but all addressed the broad goals outlined above and all included a publicity programme of meetings , brochures and media coverage .
3 The interesting fact to note is that dinosaurs soon benefited from bipedality in the same way humans later did — better vision .
4 Acute haemolytic crises usually result from exposure to oxidant drugs , fava beans , bacterial or viral infections , or severe acidosis — for example , diabetic ketoacidosis .
5 In Zvornik 's empty streets , a ragbag collection of Serbian fighters edgily dash from doorway to doorway to avoid sniper fire .
6 ‘ Pole is important , even if the statistics show that no more than 50 per cent of the winners here started from pole in the last 10 years , ’ he said .
7 No it took me fifteen minutes tonight to get from school to Kyle 's Kyle 's school !
8 In sum , their duties probably varied from place to place and from time to time , although there was always likely to be a strong police element , especially in those areas on or near the frontiers where military government was paramount and where the natives enjoyed only limited autonomy .
9 For instance , I remember him back at Troon eleven years later going from bunker to bunker at the postage Stamp like a lost man — — at the same time as Gene Sarazen got a hole-in-one there .
10 The problems mostly arose from lack of capital and only in a few cases had any action been taken — two had recently purchased houses in nearby villages for their sons and some had been able to purchase or rent some more land .
11 Variations obviously occur from village to village and from area to area , so that no claim is made that what follows in this chapter applies to each and every village in England .
12 The proportion of adolescents among the female population married or in union varies greatly among developing countries and , depending on local traditions , their problems and the perception of these problems also vary from country to country .
13 Receptive field properties also differ from area to area .
14 In every Shakespeare play where prose appears ( as it does in all but four : Henry VI , Parts 1 and 3 ; King John ; Richard II ) , characters constantly move from prose to verse , or from verse to prose , and back again .
15 By the eighth century the eastward drift of shingle along the coast had given natural protection to the spread of the salt marsh , and during the 12th and 13th centuries Pevensey Levels gradually changed from saltmarsh to reed and sedge meadows and ultimately pasture .
16 However , the idea that archive work might be used in the training of embryo diplomats still surfaced from time to time in France .
17 All the yards now employ from order to order with minimal ‘ retained ’ work forces .
18 Unfortunately , these accidents still occur from time to time .
19 The down side , of course , is that hasty discharges often result from shortage of beds and thus the new procedures will probably block beds .
20 Well more misery for Forest another defeat more injuries less to go from strength to strength and we 'll be right back .
21 These fluctuations probably result from interaction between phasic gastroduodenal motility and intermittent pancreatic secretion of neutralising bicarbonate .
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