Example sentences of "[be] [verb] from [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Therefore , because it is unlikely that there will ever be revised editions , and because I should just hate to see my name on anything that could not be relied on , the probability is that the books will progressively be withdrawn from publication after a currency of a few years . ’ |
2 | At present , the Australian stations are served by three ageing chartered supply vessels — one of which is to be withdrawn from service in 1987/88 . |
3 | It was announced on Jan. 18 , 1990 , that the Iowa , together with its sister ship the New Jersey , was to be withdrawn from service after repairs had been completed [ see also p. 37178 ] . |
4 | If it did not , it could always argue that many more children would be withdrawn from school altogether . |
5 | To give it a chance of success , some French troops had to be withdrawn from south of the Somme and their lines taken over by Haig 's men , disrupting his own long-planned attack in Flanders . |
6 | His first step was to request that all copies of the European Vehicle and Components ’ Plan be withdrawn from circulation . |
7 | They recommended that grants for land improvement and drainage should be withdrawn from Section 43 areas and that all capital grant schemes in the LFA should be modified to encourage a wide range of conservation measures . |
8 | During software development and integration , it is standard practice for software modules to be withdrawn from LIFESPAN and modified/tested in a local environment . |
9 | In Britain , two months earlier , the government had decided in a last-minute about-turn that its nuclear power stations , once the shining lamps that would light the way to the sustainably developed future , were unsaleable and so would be withdrawn from privatization of the electricity industry . |
10 | In this statement to the House of Commons Hurd stated that ‘ in the public interest ’ funding should be withdrawn from community organisations who might ‘ directly or indirectly improve the standing or further the aims of a paramilitary organisation ’ . |
11 | When Sotheby 's told the owner that both pieces would have to be withdrawn from sale , he decided to withdraw his collection . |
12 | Second-hand and home-made toys are to be withdrawn from sale in charity shops because of a new EC law . |
13 | Although the programme could be altered from day to day , it is expected that objectors ' evidence will begin the following Tuesday . |
14 | Some of the most important fossils are extremely tiny : these will be discussed in a later chapter , and what follows is concerned with the forms that can be recognized from hand specimens . |
15 | Given the inclusion of so many considerations , it is not surprising that standards may be amended from time to time : for example , standards may be made more stringent if new scientific research reveals a lower threshold of effect than was previously believed to exist . |
16 | The contents of this handbook may be amended from time to time . |
17 | This should be undertaken from time to time with assistance in recruiting , training expansion of groups and also with Liturgical experiences . |
18 | They will be relayed from radio bases in public places such as railway stations and motorway service stations . |
19 | The essential elements of the political economic system are : first , that the Government is accountable to an electorate composed of all adult men and women and so liable , if the electorate judges unsatisfactory the account rendered , to be dismissed from office and replaced by another administration ; and secondly , that wages are determined by free collective bargaining in the labour market . |
20 | Any member failing to pay his subscription for one year or more may be dismissed from membership by the Council at a duly convened meeting , or by a postal ballot of the voting members of Council . |
21 | An example will be given from English . |
22 | His resignation arose not so much because an audience was to be debarred from geology , as because women were to be debarred from the audience . |
23 | One might suppose , then , that under the RES an exclusion clause would be superfluous , since the few parties affected by it would be debarred from representation by the very paucity of their support . |
24 | An order for delivery of particulars may direct that in default the proceedings be dismissed , or that the defendant or respondent be debarred from defending , or that part of a pleading be struck out ( Ord 13 , r 2(2) ) . |
25 | Nevertheless they recommended that a committee should be formed from Gold Coast leaders to chart a programme of reform . |
26 | If an organisation is market leader and has a size and presence which can ensure that manpower planning is possible so that most jobs can be filled from graduate entry , then the need for an executive search firm is probably limited to a few specialist or technical appointments . |
27 | Clay typing is facilitated by the Natural Gamma-Ray Spectroscopy log ( NGT ) ; only then can illite be differentiated from kaolinite . |
28 | Uneven development is taken here as a key concept , both in explaining why there are local state institutions to begin with , and in understanding how local politics come to be differentiated from place to place . |
29 | You may have loved her or hated her , agreed with her or violently opposed her , but not even her worst enemy could have accused her of spinelessness or a desire to be shielded from life 's little unpleasantnesses . |
30 | Jackson , currently embroiled in a child sex scandal in the US , was said to be recovering from dehydration , suffered in the intense heat of Bangkok , his last stop . |