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 . |