Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] from [adv] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Now if anything be certain it is this , that where there are general words in a later Act capable of reasonable and sensible application without extending them to subjects specifically dealt with by earlier legislation , you are not to hold that earlier and special legislation indirectly repealed , altered , or derogated from merely by force of such general words , without any indication of a particular intention to do so .
2 As we have said many times in this section , ‘ wholesale ’ deals are often done on extremely small commissions or to profit from extremely small interest rate differentials .
3 Fonts may be added or deleted from here .
4 This has enabled S C F to persuade the Home Office 's prison department to run such facilities and budget for such facilities in every prison to be rebuilt and there appears to be no shortage of those , or designed from herein after .
5 The terms of the gift stipulate at least one major photography exhibition every two years , whether from the museum 's own holdings or borrowed from outside .
6 They will replace a hotchpotch of weapons that these countries have in the past developed for their own use or bought from abroad .
7 Whatever the unit , its activities can be explained from without or understood from within .
8 All this had taken its toll and there was no opportunity to rest or recover from either private loss or public defeat .
9 This applies particularly to the most recent one-day course , which included a contribution from Philip Waterhouse ( coordinator of the Self-supported Study Project ) and some workshops run by teacher-members of the Inservice Panel and employing staff-development materials either developed by themselves or derived from elsewhere .
10 In the past , support meant removing the child for considerable periods of time into the care of remedial teachers either within the school or coming from outside .
11 ‘ Going towards Moorgate or coming from there ? ’
12 It was involved with your trial and error and practice , but it was certainly involved with Vicky and that is watching , or learning from okay .
13 The last four articles in this section reverse this direction of gaze , where the accounts are ‘ looking in ’ instead and describing some of the personal struggles with regard to teaching and change — change either imposed from outside or desired from within .
14 Here the ‘ essence ’ of the popular is constant , though whether this is seen as proffered from above or engendered from below , whether ‘ the people ’ is regarded as an active , progressive historical subject or a manipulated dupe , varies .
15 A Notts member from 1949–50 , he set himself the task of tracing every man who either had played for the county or gone from there to play for another county : ‘ I had no particular idea of being a historian or publishing anything , and I was n't particularly worried about the Hardstaffs , the Larwoods and the other famous players .
16 There is ample literary and pictorial evidence to suggest that rugs were in use from the 12th century onwards , but it is not clear whether these were Chinese in origin or imported from abroad .
17 Often the information on which policies are based is too generalised , or taken from too broad a data base , to allow administrators to respond to local conditions .
18 Whether the assessor is company-based or comes from outside the company , he or she will need to have an NVQ qualification in training , assessment and verification awarded by City and Guilds to standards established by the Training and Development Lead Body .
19 Will materials , components , and the product be made internally or purchased from outside ?
20 If you are not part of a discussion group you can still represent your parish at the Diocesan Assembly and become involved in local and Diocesan events that develop from there .
21 About forty helium balloons that materialised from nowhere with this American girl have been wound hard up into the window , and judder maniacally together in the wind .
22 When all that was available was the free-fall bomb , air-delivered systems were essential to the deterrent , but , once the first land and sea-launched ballistic missiles were to hand , it was possible to have weapons systems that operated from comparatively safe sanctuaries and , in the case of Polaris , from the virtually impenetrable depths of the sea .
23 There 's an underground tunnel that goes from here to an empty tomb in the churchyard .
24 Examples include odour and taste discrimination , with important effects on the evolution of language and cuisine ; preference from infancy onward for certain basic geometric designs over others ; phoneme formation ; rules of transformational grammar ; the development of particular , species-wide facial expressions to denote the emotions of fear , loathing , anger , surprise , and happiness ; various other forms of nonverbal communication ; the pattern of mother-infant bonding ; the method of infant holding by women ; fear of strangers ( a usually strong response that persists from about six to eighteen months ) ; phobias ; and others ( see the review by Lumsden & Wilson , 1981 ) .
25 It is a deep-seated desire that lingers from long ago .
26 Total loans for house buying has more than quadrupled from about £9.1 billion to £43 billion , with the number of mortgages increasing by 62 p.c. from 6.5m to about 10m .
27 A structure and meaning to the day has to be found from inside rather than imposed from outside .
28 The next night I went on without Dutch courage and flattened a drunken heckler with a couple of speedy put-downs that came from nowhere ( 't was I , your valiant defence mechanism again ) and a new career was born .
29 ‘ I 've got things in my head that came from nowhere , ’ he said , ‘ things that do n't make sense to me .
30 Maggie was horrified at the wave of dismay that came from nowhere .
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