Example sentences of "that [noun] [be] [verb] from [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But what 's important , as I 've said before ( page 16 ) , is that the learner should know that there are alternatives , and that words are spelled from options within the language .
2 However , a close examination of this work shows that it is not strictly ab initio , in that extrapolations are made from calculations performed on other molecules .
3 Although Mitterrand had reportedly originally intended to exclude the United States , Havel persuaded him during a visit to Paris in March 1991 that delegates be invited from members of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development ( EBRD ) and would thus include the USA , Canada and Japan [ see p. 38155 for EBRD membership ] .
4 Duguit 's theory is based on the fact that rights are derived from duties .
5 The TTF undertook to encourage both members and non-members to be aware of where supplies came from , to ensure that timber was bought from suppliers that were committed to " sustainable " resources wherever possible , and to work for the implementation of forest management schemes .
6 ‘ Now I know how my grandparents felt when they heard that Derek was to hang from journalists at their door . ’
7 After a further examination at Bethesda , it was revealed on May 9 that Bush was suffering from Graves 's disease , the same thyroid disorder which had affected his wife , Barbara , since 1989 .
8 Some people , he explained , still wrongly believed that bodies were removed from coffins before being cremated and that ashes were eventually taken from a communal pile .
9 Then Bernard ( now Major ) Davidson was informed that Lothar was suffering from scabies .
10 The tissue pepsin value changed inversely compared with secreted pepsin , which suggests that pepsin is released from stores more readily , both in the resting and stimulated state , at day 3 than at day 7 ; although this tendency was seen in all groups .
11 Whereas natural science works with a basic or datum language of physical behaviour , which , if adopted for social science , would mean that action-descriptions were inferred from descriptions of behaviour , Weber offers the social sciences a datum language of actions .
  Next page