Example sentences of "[verb] from this [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Juries saw no problem deciding whom they were to despatch from this world : let similar bodies decide who is to come into it .
2 A lot of the men , had come from this pit where dad worked .
3 So that 's been very important , economies of scale are very important in the erm , the growth of manufacturing trade , which is essentially an increase in intra , in intra industry trade , as , as opposed to inter industry trade which is erm the simultaneous import and export of er products from different industries like produce capital goods , so cars and in return you will import erm food products but the majority of the increase in world trade has come from this intra industry variety .
4 Much of what we now know , in a still difficult and very controversial area , about different kinds of ‘ televised violence ’ and their differential effects on differently situated children , or about the effects of different kinds of political broadcasting — party statements , electoral reporting , definitions of the ‘ main issues ’ — has come from this kind of research .
5 The proposal has come from Scotia , but might equally have come from this side .
6 Did this paint particle come from this car body ?
7 As he peered through his mind 's eye it seemed rather that the deepest water changed into a different type of material which sank down and down forever , tossed by its own fierce storms , swayed by its own currents that were swifter than any ocean 's — until far off elsewhere there surfaced from this immaterium yet other seas of life , which were other worlds .
8 Far below , in the street opposite the 550 building , stood the tall statue of the Garment Worker , strangely distorted from this angle , and around the plinth on which it stood ant-like figures of vagrants and layabouts sat , oblivious to the cold .
9 In terms of the acceptance of law and order , the bulk of the catholic — nationalist remnant form a part of the civil society of Northern Ireland , though as much as a third of the remnant can defect from this consensus , as when supporting the Provisionals over the ‘ H ’ -Block prison issue .
10 W w what w what am I to infer from this expert reports ?
11 It is difficult to infer from this passage that Strabo trusted Timagenes about the Cells and never made use of the original text of Posidonius — who had been directly or indirectly his own teacher .
12 When the enterprises concerned need temporary workers , they will recruit from this list ( see IRS 1986c ) .
13 The irony is even though the travellers have now been evicted from this field in Enstone … it will stay unused … the landowers are being paid to keep it that way as part of the Ministry of Agriculture 's Set Aside policy
14 That many of the findings here are similar to those of our other work on adult education , we feel adds to the value of what we report from this study of applicants .
15 The nine gleaned from this encounter puts Essex ahead of the field on 30 points , with Norfolk one-and-a-half behind as the six-time winners prepare for a final match against Cambridgeshire .
16 Is it possible to extrapolate from this decision , and to say that an offence is committed whenever the constable is seeking to exercise a statutory power of arrest such as , for example , the power of arrest conferred by section 5 ?
17 Now to extrapolate from this example to a general argument that familiarity of a subject is a disadvantage would clearly be absurd .
18 Overall , the world 's savanna lands ( those in Australia have been omitted from this discussion as this chapter deals specifically with developing countries ) present both considerable potential and considerable environmental degradation .
19 Barbados-born John Holder , who umpired four Tests in Pakistan in 1989–90 , has been omitted from this year 's panel for international matches , which comprises ‘ Dickie ’ Bird , Barry Dudleston , John Hampshire , Mervyn Kitchen , Battie Mayer , Ken and Roy Palmer , and David Shepherd .
20 China was conspicuously omitted from this scheme since it had already rejected it .
21 But I was not ready for the sheer , throat-tightening beauty of virtually the entirety of this CD , which contains all eleven of Jenkins 's six-part Fantasias ( a twelfth may be spurious , and was omitted from this recording ) as well as the other works for six-part viol consort , the two Pavans and two In Nomines .
22 Intentionally omitted from this volume and its companions is any more subjective appreciation or interpretation of Magritte 's art .
23 They can not be omitted from this book .
24 It seems unlikely that many cases will occur now in relation to the old law , and therefore it is omitted from this book .
25 Mr Heseltine has long advocated an extension of such agencies to other British regions , and Sir Geoffrey 's new-found support could signal Cabinet debate on industrial policy — an issue which has been omitted from this week 's conference agenda .
26 The boot containing the folding camp bed is omitted from this view — cf photographs .
27 Criticism of the theories has been omitted from this chapter for the sake of simplicity .
28 ( Three authors publishing more than 100 papers each have been omitted from this graph ) .
29 ( Three authors publishing more than 100 papers each have been omitted from this graph ) .
30 Nyamwisi Movingi had resigned from this post on March 22 , accusing the government of leading the country to disaster .
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