Example sentences of "and from [art] [noun] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In addition to twenty-seven sculptures on all scales and from every period in Calder 's long career , the selection includes a strong representation of works on paper ink drawings , gouaches , etchings and lithographs one oil painting , ‘ Fireman 's Dinner for Brancusi ’ ( 1926 ) , and several examples of his jewellery .
2 And from a lady in Putney : ‘ Why kill trees for coffins ?
3 Hole and colleagues report the incidence of cancer as well as mortality , and they compare rates observed in hypertensive patients with normative data on incidence from national figures and from a survey in Renfrew and Paisley .
4 Belau 's economy , already adversely affected by debts arising from the Aimeluk power station constructed in the early 1980s and from a delay in US aid consequent upon the compact impasse , suffered a further setback in late 1990 when the territory was severely damaged by Typhoon " Mike " .
5 Other modules may be chosen from a large pool , including the other themes and from the MSc in Knowledge Based Systems , described on p 128 .
6 A previous attempt to guess the pattern of housing inheritance , by Morgan Grenfell , a merchant bank , in 1987 , worked mainly from circumstantial evidence : from the rise in home ownership and house prices ( to predict the amounts to be inherited ) and from the rise in holdings of financial assets ( to predict that inheritors would invest much of their new wealth in deposit accounts and shares ) .
7 He sets out the triads that can be extracted from a particular scale , then he applies various formulae for adding and subtracting notes to and from the triads in order to realise the scale type 's total harmonic potential .
8 Alexander walking to and from the water-tank in Crowe 's kitchen-garden , where balloon-like tadpoles , the size of half-crowns , dived and plashed their lips , unable to emerge and metamorphose into frogs , was amused sometimes by the counterpoint that wailed in his mind : Cabestan 's heart , Vincent 's ear , gassed soldiers ' throats , Brooke 's poppies , the troubadour 's lady like rose and gillyflower , Vincent 's irises , jealousy rage and fear , fear jealousy and rage , fear and indignation and pity .
9 Edward III 's victories at Crécy and Poitiers did much in themselves to generate enthusiasm for the war , and the profits both from these victories and from the chevauchées in Aquitaine , Normandy and Brittany helped to ensure the support of the nobility for the war .
10 A king who sought to defy his magnates and preserve his favourites , who was threatened from Scotland and France , who was distrusted and despised by his French wife , would surely need all the support he could get from his clergy and from the pope in order to survive ; and for this , one might expect him to pay dearly by concessions .
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