Example sentences of "[adv] [v-ing] from the " in BNC.
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1 | Jack was very much in the groove , rarely deviating from the fairways and the centre of the green , but was a mere one shot under par , while Miguel was one shot better . |
2 | Redmond , now with Oldham , is slowly recovering from the misery of his final few months at the club he joined as a boy . |
3 | It is when we reach the realm of ‘ abnormal deviance ’ that the teacher 's problematic really emerges , for here pupils are not only deviating from the ‘ good pupil ’ role , but may be denying or over-exaggerating their gender image as well . |
4 | This effect can vitiate scientific observation , as when seventeenth century experimenters , familiar with the concepts of post-Galilean mechanics but not of electrostatic attraction and repulsion , regularly reported observing chaff falling as though by gravitation , or mechanically rebounding from the electrified bodies which attracted them . |
5 | They had heard loud banging from the boxcars , as if someone was trying to attract their attention . |
6 | The bowling alley , which is part of a Karachi fairground , is very old — perhaps dating from the 1950s — and seems to have been imported from the US , commented Faye Ashton who organised the event during HMS Chatham 's recent goodwill visit . |
7 | The price alterations are a study in themselves , an example being the First Return from Craven Arms to Eaton , the original fare perhaps dating from the last century , crossed out and altered by some unfortunate clerk , by gas light , with a fine nib pen and a bottle of railway ink. , round about 1915 . |
8 | However , if we also add the timings of such movements from two more manuscripts of Lalande motets , F-Pn , H387 , a reduced score of the Miserere a grand choeur ( illus.4 ) , and F-Pn , Rés. 1363 , a reduced score of Dominus regnavit , both being copies apparently dating from the 1740s and probably prepared for the Concert Spirituel , we begin to notice the familiar syndrome of some slowing down in some tempos , compared with those of the earlier H400D . |
9 | This means that he did not consider that by taking the brahmacārya vow he was necessarily withdrawing from the life of society , which was one reason why he resented being called an ascetic . |
10 | He was constantly dashing from the shop floor to the offices , to his car , to his suppliers , to his customers and back again . |
11 | Because you just seem to have chosen the things by looking , not by actually randomly sampling from the tumours . |
12 | They 're only paying from the top branch up to the last branch on the tree . |
13 | I refuse , but after much heckling from the others , I agree to sing ‘ Nancy Spain' , if Cal will accompany me . |
14 | All I 'm try we 're only speaking from the best interests here , speaking from the bloody heart rather than the head probably here but we we do want th we do want the best but it 's the old old story , it 's botching it up is n't it , it 's fudging it , it 's trying to fit a square pet into a role cos we pay crap money y'know |
15 | The first consisted of " expenditure necessarily resulting from the Treaty " and related mainly to agricultural expenditure and expenditure upon third countries , while the latter type of expenditure covered principally the structural funds . |
16 | The one terrible thing I witnessed as a small child was my mother suddenly rising from the dining-table with face tortured and crying , ‘ I am going to die ’ . |
17 | In fact , better finishing from the Den 's Park outfit would have increased Rangers ' embarrassment but they were let of the hook on a number of occasions , particularly by Dodds . |
18 | Apart from O'Leary 's injury , Arsenal had things largely their own way in the first half against a Norwich team who were still obviously suffering from the disappointment of Sunday 's Cup defeat . |
19 | The voices were now audible , obviously coming from the room . |
20 | Confused and troubled , and with her body still gently glowing from the pleasure it had shared with the man lying next to her , Jessamy closed her eyes and tried to shut everything out . |
21 | Unlike a ridge like the Aonach Eagach where escape is impossible until the end , it is not only feasible , but very tempting to come off the ridge and wander into the wild land of the Glenquoich forest that appears so inviting from the tops . |
22 | ‘ After saluting him while he was eagerly drinking from the cup which had been presented , the dagger of an attendant pierced him through . ’ |
23 | They were constantly issuing from the lips of ministers . |
24 | He 's suddenly swapping from the police to er security in a big bank . |
25 | The future Quaker abolitionist , James Cropper of Liverpool , accepted the necessity ‘ for a humble , dependent state of mind naturally arising from the knowledge of the superior wisdom and goodness of the will and ways of God to our own ’ and found gloom about the future banished . |
26 | Any loss naturally arising from the breach ; |
27 | Damages are assessed on the basis of the damage naturally arising from the breach and in the contemplation of the parties . |
28 | After much shuffling from the living room Tom opened the door . |
29 | Perhaps arising from the close personal comradeship of those war years was Basil 's empathy with ordinary working folk . |
30 | The genital slits are relatively long extending from the edge of the disk to half way towards the oral frame . |