Example sentences of "is [verb] [adv] from [art] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In the ideal situation he is hidden completely from the observed , who are not aware of the researcher 's presence at all .
2 The microfilm is also an invaluable tool for disabled workers who are unable to get to the central paper system or for an interview room that is situated far from the general bureau office .
3 A stream comes down on the east side and disappears into a cave entrance admitting to a passage below the track where , on the west side , it is joined underground from an alternative pothole entrance .
4 The mould is broken away from the hardened bronze , the ends of the tie-rods sawn off , faults patched and the surface cleaned ; and though much fine detail was completed in the model , more can be chiselled on the cold bronze .
5 Cop the name of the man ( above ) who is stepping down from a top job .
6 Given that these ‘ older ’ users are more likely to have worked and to inject heroin , rather than smoke it , the sample is skewed away from the archetypal ‘ young unemployed heroin chaser ’ profiled in our prevalence surveys .
7 Administration is carried out from the Head Office in London , where up-to-date office technology is very much in evidence .
8 One of the most powerful , problem-solving methods is to work backwards from the hoped-for solution .
9 This dislocated alternation of joy and fear , anxiety and compulsion , of being outside and inside , and of time that is distorted away from the normal sequence , is difficult to put into words , later words , linear words : but once , in a friend 's flat in Holland Park , I heard the opening passages of a gramophone record which almost caught it : Bartok 's Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion .
10 Mark 's promise that the Holy Spirit will look after their words when arraigned before councils for the sake of the gospel is brought into the Mission Charge by Matthew : it seems clear that he is looking forward from an isolated incident in the ministry of Jesus to the continuing mission of the post-resurrection church of which he was a member .
11 It is reasonable to suppose that a sense of what is usual or unusual or noticeable in language is built up from a lifelong experience of linguistic use , so that we are able to affirm with reasonable confidence and without resort to a pocket calculator ( to take a simple case already mentioned ) that Hemingway favours short sentences .
12 From the small paved area near the house a path leads down one side of the garden , giving access to the rotary drier and flanking the small lawn that is built up from a strong flowing curve , this helping to lead the eye away from those rectangular boundaries .
13 A feeling of belonging to a community , or as it has been described here , of citizenship , is built up from a whole range of social , economic and psychological components .
14 The Reef is built up from the hard skeletons of dead polyps , and forms a base for the living coral .
15 For example , the genetic material is made up from a complex molecule known as DNA ( deoxyribonucleic acid ) .
16 Here both buttocks and the far side of the back are visible in what is basically a simple three-quarter view of the figure ; one leg is in strict profile , while the other is seen almost from a frontal position .
17 Another difference between the characterization of Alison and that of the three men is that she is seen totally from the outside — one sees her appearance in her face and her clothes ; we see what actions she does .
18 The chamber is then flooded from below with 3375 litres ( 750gal ) of dip , which is pumped in from a nearby vacuum tanker .
19 Heat is radiated entirely from the ceramic coals or logs .
20 Water loss is accelerated especially from the intracellular compartment , leading to metabolic and electrolyte disturbance .
21 This is especially true if you are playing a sport such as squash , where an extremely high level of stamina is needed right from the very beginning .
22 It is suggested that support for such organisations is drawn disproportionately from the middle class , and in particular those sections of the middle class that feel most at threat from the structural changes taking place in contemporary British society .
23 Molly Allen , the disability team manager , explained how the service is moving away from the traditional model of care .
24 Current educational thinking is moving away from the whole concept of labelling children by closely defined categories , and the emphasis is rather on the individual needs of children and on the shared aspects of their development and learning .
25 This is assessed entirely from the objective assessment derived from inspection reports or bacteriological data .
26 Back on the home front , bargaining is shifting rapidly from the national arena to local level .
27 That is getting away from the old system whereby the County Council held a vast store of advisers in Macclesfield House , stacked up , and schools that needed them requested them and off they went , but schools in fact that wanted perhaps a different sort of advice , was n't able to get it from Macclesfield House , and could n't buy it outside because it did n't have the money to do so .
28 an accent mark which is set separately from the main character and is then placed either over or under it .
29 Like Baudelaire in Courbet 's painting of the artist 's studio , Minton is set apart from the central group both compositionally and by his introspection .
30 This large , impressive hotel is set back from the main road in its own grounds , and clients can walk into Going or Ellmau in around 10–15 minutes .
  Next page