Example sentences of "from its [noun pl] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The SVP was acknowledged for having supplied many visitors from its ranks in the recent past .
2 This exciting new play traces the history of the Dock Ward area of Belfast , from its origins to the present day , in an evening of song , dance , music and drama .
3 In Chapter 12 Brown reviews the development of geodemographics from its origins in the computer-based social area analysis of US census tract data from 1950 onwards .
4 Indian Civilisation 1 ( the development of Hindu culture from its origins in the Vedic age to the end of the eighteenth century ) may be followed by Indian Religion and Philosophy 2 ( the Vedas , the Upanisads and the philosophical systems to which they give rise , and related religious philosophies such as Buddhism ) , or by South Asian Studies 2 ( an ‘ area studies ’ course concerning modern developments in the subcontinent from several perspectives ) .
5 It has done so now in response to what it feels is a growing impatience from its members with the continuing reluctance of landowners to permit access to their property .
6 My being is released from its confines by the overpowering perfume , the glossy greens of the new-born leaves , the fragrance of new life .
7 From its beginnings in the second world war the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief is now Britain 's largest aid agency , with projects in seventy countries .
8 There were now clearer limitations to what the PLO could do without provoking open protest from its constituents in the occupied territories .
9 It was now also common knowledge that the aircraft , once the Wasp was within range , were to be flown from its decks to the besieged island of Malta .
10 Frontline received praise from its readers in the independent survey .
11 American Pentecostalism has travelled a long way from its roots in the southern states .
12 Bukharin mocked Preobrazhensky for his attempt to define a ‘ pure law ’ for the working of the state economy in such a transition period , by abstracting from its relations with the private sector , i.e. by examining the state sector in isolation .
13 So , by attempting to abstract state industry from its relations with the private sector , and particularly the peasant sector , Preobrazhensky abstracted from the particular and peculiar nature of the transitional economy .
14 This set the pattern of Anglo-Gascon administration for the rest of the Middle Ages , and there was little departure from its terms before the final débâcle of 1453 .
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