Example sentences of "is [adj] from [art] [noun] [unc] " in BNC.

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1 Or , at least , the bat 's sensation of her mate may be no more different from my visual sensation of a flamingo , than my visual sensation of a flamingo is different from a flamingo 's visual sensation of a flamingo .
2 The abundance of mobile living rooms is clear from the firm 's own client base .
3 It is clear from the man 's record that he was an ally of a man who escaped from Northern Ireland and who is wanted in Northern Ireland to pay part of the price for the crime that he committed .
4 This is clear from the Attorney-General 's statement in Parliament that the practice in its widest form was lawful : a curious ( though not unprecedented ) anticipation of a judicial decision by the Government 's senior law officer and a member of the executive ( Adeney and Lloyd , 1986 : 104 ) .
5 A portion of the Mac-T9000 's memory is addressable from the Macintosh 's main memory .
6 Either condition is unsatisfactory from the banks ' point of view .
7 It is important from the landlord 's point of view to ensure that the centre does not expand where the tenant has been given a fixed service charge percentage , unless provisions are inserted in the lease to countenance this .
8 The AA document is available from the organisation 's shops or by calling freephone .
9 At Women 's Convenience , A Handbook On The Design Of Women 's Public Toilets , is available from the Women 's Design Service , 18 Ashwin Street , London E8 3DL , price £7 inc p&p .
10 Further information and advice on making a living will is available from the Trust 's Advice Centre or Immunity .
11 Further information is available from the Keeper 's Office
12 However , it is inefficient from a user 's point of view to leave course assessment to suppliers ( who will not necessarily be assessing the same thing as users ) , and inappropriate to expect individual users to be able to evaluate courses within any framework other than their own needs .
13 Writing is made to seem a small betrayal , as it may have been in the life of Prentice 's Uncle Rory , who makes a prize-winning living as the author of travel books about ‘ unlikely destinations ’ and who is absent from the grandmother 's funeral where the story begins ( with a predictable bang ) .
14 However , it is difficult to say if this is desirable from the residents ' point of view , or whether they would prefer to live in a mixed group of people with differing levels of disability ; when asked , most patients express a preference for being with others who do not have behavioural problems .
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