Example sentences of "distance [pron] from [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 When the Allies protested , Franco distanced himself from personal involvement and promised that something would be done .
2 Although he distanced himself from this view prior to the election , he campaigned strongly on the promise to " return safe and clean streets " .
3 Northamptonshire mumming , Shrovetide football , and " Plough Mondays " are examples of practices which were no longer encouraged and to an extent positively discouraged by a gentry which increasingly distanced itself from rude diversions and vulgar games .
4 Camilla and Charles then distanced themselves from each other as part of a ‘ damage-limitation exercise ’ agreed in a series of Palace-negotiated pacts .
5 If the advantages of the relative detachment of non-executives are to be maximised , there is merit in distancing them from non-contractual issues involving directly managed units .
6 One of the reasons we developed a design-led retail business , offering our own unique products , was because we saw we could distance ourselves from other retailers who were just selling manufacturers ' products and discounting them and getting into constant competitive battles .
7 Some of these are deeply rooted and irrational ; they spring from fears about ageing and death and from the psychological need to distance ourselves from selected groups of people ( homosexuals , blacks , etc . ) .
8 We wish to distance ourselves from such inferences , even though naturally we would expect our findings to generate constructive discussion about the effective use of pupils ' and teachers ' time in primary schools .
9 Ben Jonson , a ‘ scholarship boy ’ whose ability with language allowed him to gain social advancement , is keen to distance himself from popular writing whose techniques he so skilfully employs .
10 Mr Tebbit was keen yesterday to distance himself from any comparison with Mr Powell .
11 In the document which outlines this progress , and elsewhere , the CDP was anxious to distance itself from other institutions in the public sector .
12 For her latest exhibition , Oulton has gone even further to distance herself from Old Master traditions and concepts of Englishness .
13 4.8 DISTANCING YOURSELF FROM OTHER PEOPLE 'S TERMS
14 Instead their political energy was absorbed in enhancing the privileges of guild membership , seeking exemption from as many of the burdens of the ‘ service city ’ as possible , and distancing themselves from petty traders .
15 Since neither headquarters nor division executives discuss or resolve either the attributions or the frustrations , both may eventually begin to distance themselves from each other .
16 More specifically , on the issue of cultural hierarchies and class relations the Situationists tried to distance themselves from bourgeois notions of progress and their equivalence in the neo-avant-garde of the post-war period .
17 In an increasingly profit-driven state even the most conservative parts of the church have had to distance themselves from some policies .
18 When linguists became involved , with a few notable exceptions , it was mainly to distance themselves from this current of ideas and to introduce the second phase .
19 In order to try to distance themselves from this operation they employed a freelance , just as they tap telephones illegally or burgle property by using freelances .
20 It was the 1960s before the bishops began to distance themselves from direct relationships with the government of the day .
21 On the issue of regional government , I do not want to distance myself from English history , but I recognise that Whitehall government is a long way from Manchester .
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