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

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1 pBLcat2 and wild type oligo I constructs from the same experiments are shown for direct comparison .
2 William Wright of Charing Cross 's 1634 monument to Lady Deane at Great Maplestead , Essex , has a more exaggerated movement than that of Donne , and the hands are now completely liberated from the shroud as she emerges from the black marble recess of the tomb .
3 For four and five she spells from the other end and for six she again spells the letters .
4 She comes from the 1st Torrington Pack in North Devon — just like Clare and Pippa .
5 In this respect it differs from the four perspectives discussed earlier in the chapter , which converge in adopting a social model of health for a restructuring of priorities and goals .
6 No , no , it 's not only their own er we have got er entries from W I members of other villages , but mainly its from the members who live in the villages and of course that is the beauty of the book , where it differs from the normal travel book , it 's the story of villages by people who actually live in them .
7 It differs from the ordinary railway by using lightweight trains , calling at more convenient places and operating economically by the use of advanced technology now available for the custom-built rapid transit systems .
8 It differs from the other consumer goods in the private market in four ways .
9 He also said that he would not undertake to follow best practice while it differs from the operational guidelines .
10 This was a large rectangular building in the same tradition as the mortuary houses at Phourni , with a rabbit warren of small chambers inside and a colonnade along the east front ; it differs from the Phourni mortuary houses in having been built all at once .
11 Peripheral awareness becomes progressively blurred as it recedes from the foveal zone and adjusts to an overall equilibrium .
12 There will be variations which stem from the background and cultural heritage of the children who are in attendance , from where the school is situated as well as the resources ( in quality and quantity ) which it receives from the local authority .
13 For the horologist the nominal essence of the clock is an idea of its real essence ; in this he differs from the gazing countryman , to whom the nominal essence is simply some combination of various observable features .
14 Perhaps it is churlish of me , after the kind remarks of the Minister , to venture to comment on what he has just said , but at the risk of being tiresome , may I point out that what I said before was that it does not follow that a decision made by the Home Secretary corresponds with the advice that he receives from the chief inspector .
15 It is the result of conscious planning by multinational corporations and banks and it results from the conscious actions taken by the US and UK governments in building the post-war world .
16 Obviously , if it ensues from the two variables originally considered , it does not need to be controlled .
17 ‘ The trouble with Joe , ’ one of his more affluent colleagues in the pop business told me , ‘ is that he suffers from the fatal curse of taste . ’
18 To begin with the efficacy of parliamentary control , it is clear that it suffers from the federal constitution itself : the intricacy of policy decisions , complex inter-governmental decision-making structures at the national , sub-national and supranational level , and the inherent complexity of new policy areas , have all made parliamentary scrutiny more difficult .
19 The use of Form N111 , even if it has become ‘ obsolete , ’ was in fact more appropriate than the use of Form N79 , although it suffers from the same defect as the High Court form in that it does not draw the attention of the contemnor to his right to apply to the court to purge his contempt .
20 This approach has the advantage of providing detailed data about the nature and severity of illness in society , but it suffers from the obvious drawback that not everyone who is ill seeks or receives medical treatment and not everyone who seeks medical treatment is necessarily ill .
21 As an ‘ up-to-date overview of modern surface analysis techniques ’ ( to quote the publishers ) , it suffers from the inevitable deficiencies of this genre : lack of cohesion and consistency between chapters ; variable standard ; a element of repetition ; and few cross-references .
22 It is far better to look upon the purpose of such negotiations as to define the risks which each party is willing to accept , and what benefits or rewards he requires from the other party in order to accept those risks .
23 It stretches from the endless beaches of the Costa del Sol and the Costa de la Luz , to the snowy peaks of the sierras and great plains where the fierce black bulls graze .
24 There is a good deal of evidence from these provinces to show that inland waterways were major thoroughfares ; it ranges from the idiosyncratic distribution of pottery and other hardware to discoveries of the boats used , including the great flat-bottomed lighters which plied the Rhine and its tributaries .
25 It ranges from the traditional dances of ancient Greece used by David Bintley for his Choros to the latest pieces of minimal music by John Cage that are used for Robbins ' Glass Pieces .
26 This is his favourite event , together with the Open — an event where he is as surprised as he is flattered by the support he gets from the British public .
27 Or so it appears from the valuable memoirs of Mrs Belloc Lowndes , in chapter nine of her Merry Wives of Westminster :
28 If they are out of sight ( eg , they leave the buzzing weather-vane in a courtyard and retire indoors ) , the Fiend simply flies away when it appears from the shattering weather-vane .
29 It appears from the German newspaper report that the Bonn authorities , in the form of BfV , were told what was going on following MI5 and MI6 's involvement in 1981 .
30 ’ But it appears from the fourth plea that that marriage had already been agreed on , and that the testator knew it .
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