Example sentences of "[Wh det] [vb base] from [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Areas particularly badly affected include the cities of Giurgiu , Braila and Turnu-Severin , which suffer from severe acid rain ; the provinces of Gorj , Sibiu and Maramures have sulphur dioxide in the atmosphere at 12 times the official limit .
2 The same arrangement has existed for many years with the USAF 's 170 F-111 bomber aircraft which fly from Upper Heyford in Oxfordshire and Lakenheath in Suffolk .
3 Systems are thus configured to provide various tools , which range from two-dimensional drafting programs , for the production of engineering drawings to set standards , through to full solid and surface modelling , in order that complex objects can be machined .
4 Beyond these lies an archipelago of small regional or city broadcasters which range from dubious one-studio enterprises in the Sicilian hinterland to smartly presented local stations in the cities .
5 These arrangements , which range from splendid pavements with naturalistic displays to simple geometric mosaics , include most of those attributed to the original Corinian school ( Smith 1965 ) .
6 Furthermore , small bowel enteroscopy in patients taking NSAIDs has confirmed the abnormalities in the mid small bowel , which range from erythematous blebs and villus atrophy to frank ulceration , all of which may bleed .
7 American and European paintings , prints and sculptures , account for only a fraction of the museum 's 100,000 objects which range from American Indian material , African art , and musical instruments , to Nabataen sculpture from Jordan , Egyptian and classical antiquities , Asian art , costumes , and 300 American , English and Continental portrait miniatures .
8 Wetlands under threat have included a variety of landscapes : swamps of tall reed or reed sweet-grass ; marshes of rush and sedge , which sometimes develop into scrub of willow and bog myrtle ; fens , whose lush vegetation is nourished by alkaline groundwater , and which range from open pools , often the remains of peat cutting , to grazed beds of meadowsweet and iris , grading in turn to the wet woodlands known as alder ‘ carr ’ ; mires , such as the mosses of the North-West , whose deep peatlands support sphagnum moss and heather , scattered with glades of birch , the favourite haunt of nightjars .
9 Those beaches which benefit from improved sewage treatment systems , such as Hunstanton in Norfolk , are praised for their water quality .
10 The traditional public finance approach to intergovernmental grants ( or grants-in-aid ) which flow from central ( or federal ) government to local ( or state ) authorities has been concerned with the question of what form the grant should take .
11 According to the labour supply function , changes in the employment of labour which flow from prior changes in aggregate demand will not call forth changes in money wages when the initial state is one of less than full employment .
12 They urge a fuller , more activist policy of enforcement , and advocate wider restraint on economic pursuits , in the interest of minimizing the harms which flow from unregulated activity , even though this may impose substantial costs and restraints upon productive enterprise .
13 The ‘ rationale for some of the more rigid land constraints which flow from national policies ’ also needs review , particularly the planning presumption against development of agricultural land .
14 Offensive odours which emanate from domestic or industrial premises can cause serious annoyance to persons in the locality , and inevitably give rise to public concern , spreading as they do in some cases over a wide area .
15 Against such theories , Tredell sets those which emerge from other disciplines , and which have lately been more commanding and influential .
16 However , although southern Scandinavia is indeed subject to frequent airstreams from Britain , those airstreams are only mildly polluted compared with the occasional airstreams which originate from central and Eastern Europe ( Czechoslovakia , Hungary , Poland , eastern Germany ) .
17 Muscle attachments penetrate the epidermis , the myofibrillae usually being associated with tonofibrillae that run through the epidermis and into the procuticle , while the oenocytes ( p. 256 ) which originate from epidermal cells sometimes remain closely associated with this layer .
18 Here , as with academic freedom for teaching staff , we should distinguish between freedoms which derive from civil rights and those which derive from the character of academic life .
19 Most of the numerical problems which arise in matrix studies ( particularly those which derive from dynamical systems ) lead ultimately to one or both of two basic processes : ( a ) the inversion of a numerical matrix ; ( b ) the evaluation of its eigenvalues and vectors .
20 A Green Paper ( Cmnd 7944 , February 1981 ) advocated the notion of the ‘ incorporated limited firm ’ designed to combine the benefits which derive from separate legal personality but without adopting the fullest protection of limited liability currently available by incorporation .
21 To be autonomous or authentic one should be strong , independent , rational , coherent or consistent , able to distinguish clearly those aspects of one 's previous self which derive from male-dominated conditioning and reject them .
22 When anthropologists study facets of their own society their vision seems to become distorted by prejudices which derive from private rather than public experience .
23 If soil erosion is principally identified as an environmental problem , then the ‘ degrees of freedom ’ , and policy options which derive from concomitant changes in the social sphere are thereby closed .
24 They may have views on issues which derive from previous experience .
25 Instead , they are studied by observation , descriptive essays or case histories , or , even more than other women , in ways which derive from biological or anthropological research .
26 For example , types of worker resistance which derive from spontaneous , unofficial initiatives on the part of groups of workers often benefit from a degree of tacit legitimacy , in the sense that those in authority may ‘ turn a blind eye ’ to various workshop practices .
27 Thus the criminal law defines only some types of avoidable killing as murder : it excludes , for example , deaths resulting from acts of negligence , such as employers ' failure to maintain safe working conditions in factories and mines ( Swartz 1975 ) ; or deaths resulting from an organization 's reluctance to maintain appropriate safety standards ( Erickson 1976 ) ; or deaths which result from governmental agencies ' giving environmental health risks a low priority ( Liazos 1972 ) ; or deaths resulting from drug manufacturers ' failure to conduct adequate research on new chemical compounds before embarking on aggressive marketing campaigns ( Silverman and Lee 1974 ) ; or deaths from a dangerous drug that was approved by health authorities on the strength of a bribe from a pharmaceutical company ( Braithwaite and Geis 1981 ) ; or deaths resulting from car manufacturers refusing to recall and repair thousands of known defective vehicles because they calculate that the costs of meeting civil damages will be less ( Swigert and Farrell 1981 ) ; and in most jurisdictions deaths resulting from drunken or reckless people driving cars with total indifference to the potential cost in terms of human lives are also excluded .
28 The savings calculated in the EC study which result from open access in Europe are based on improbable assumptions .
29 a ) Culture and its impact : culture can be defined as distinctive patterns of behaviour which result from basic beliefs and traditions .
30 In the words of F. H. Bradley — someone who held views similar in many respects to Oakeshott — if we abstract those features which result from social context the exercise becomes ‘ a theoretical attempt to isolate what can not be isolated ’ .
  Next page