Example sentences of "[adv] from [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In so doing I depart somewhat from studies of working-class involvement in the formal political sphere during the twentieth century .
2 His choice is made entirely from drawings of the prospective children .
3 Theoretically at least , if tourism was to increase by £20,000 million , ( four-fold ) , and if holidays previously taken abroad were taken at home , the calculations justify the transfer of tax burden entirely from earnings to spending .
4 Here 's how to create delicious last-minute meals entirely from standbys in the store cupboard .
5 The editing problem is that this particular group of shots ends with the boat 's abrupt departure — we go suddenly from shots of the men at work to one in which the boat is already in motion : in effect , we have a jump-cut , and your task as editor is to find some way of bridging the gap in the action .
6 The canal age effectively began in south-west Lancashire where it developed naturally from improvements to the river navigations serving Liverpool and Manchester .
7 In this framework , inequality in lifetime income arises basically from differences in endowments .
8 Open grasslands , for example , currently experience an annual loss of of soil , with overgrazed areas losing , which compares with annually from soils under secondary and primary forest respectively .
9 Not content to let surgeons perform unguided , she remains conscious to give instructions and read aloud from books of psychoanalysis .
10 William suffered greatly from nightmares as a child .
11 The danger of injury or death arises less from fights between rival groups of fans as from the panic that actual or threatened attacks provoke amongst the general public .
12 It is cheating a bit , I fear , to think of the Basque Coast as Pyrenean , because at this end of the chain , unlike at the other , the mountains fight shy of the water and make a decisive turn to the west some miles inland , to enter Spain ; so you can see the most northerly or westerly Pyrenees easily enough from points along the coast , but you ca n't feel you are among them .
13 But , unlike houses which change as fashions do , swinging expensively from florals to stripes , the transformation will continue to be gradual — you could call it organic — and inexpensive , ‘ all done on air ’ , as Elizabeth Jane puts it .
14 Until 1971 , dolphin mortality could be estimated only from analyses of vessels ' logbooks — and the figures are probably underestimates .
15 Sense of pleasure at thought of someone trying to imagine glass only from notes in Green Box .
16 We saw in an earlier chapter how innovatory schools such as Madeley Court and Codsall Comprehensive regarded " in-service training " as an important factor in their planning , and how such training was provided , not only from courses outside the school , but also from within , by judicious deployment of available personnel .
17 The hon. Gentleman may be right — I am not in a position to argue with him — and I am prepared to concede the point for those 2 million pensioners ; but millions of other pensioners have benefited enormously under this Government , not only from increases in the standard pension but from rising income from the state earnings-related pension scheme , rising occupational pensions and increased income from savings .
18 Angiosperms grow from ovules ( seeds ) protected in their own case , where gymnosperms grow only from seeds without the protective case .
19 There are many individuals and community groups throughout the Highlands which would benefit highly from gatherings with this type of approach .
20 It was also clear that feminist involvement had much to do with the opposition purity provoked — especially from men within the state apparatuses .
21 Much of the criticism community relations attracts , especially from colleagues in the police , derives from a misunderstanding of these goals and time-scales and a consequent failure to see that even its practitioners have clearly circumscribed expectations .
22 Fourteen partial or complete sets are known , especially from graves in Kent , but also from the upper Thames valley where they tend not to be complete .
23 Schuster says relational database performance under NT on Intel Corp boxes wo n't differ much from results under Unix , but does n't know about NT on RISC .
24 Schuster says relational database performance under NT on Intel Corp boxes wo n't differ much from results under Unix , but does n't know about RISC .
25 The problem generally classified as ‘ shirking ’ also extends to incompetence , since if the shareholders are for practical purposes unable to replace management the company may suffer from inept leadership quite separately from questions of managerial diligence .
26 Yet it is damaging to suggest that they can be answered separately from questions about the educational needs of children and young people themselves .
27 Mammalian faunas on isolated continental fragments could evolve , at least for a time , separately from faunas in other parts of the world , producing a whole series of peculiar animals that have no direct relationships to animals with a similar mode of life elsewhere .
28 The Kilbrandon Committee recommended that individual decisions should be made regarding the best measures for dealing with each child , and that these should be made separately from decisions about guilt or innocence .
29 There has been a tendency to move away from prohibitions on corporate practice — removed in the cases of architects , surveyors and accountants .
30 Other seem to be trying to assuage a guilt known only to themselves , and a few are out to keep Ali a player , a lure to those who might want to use his name in business ; though the marketplace turns away from billboards in decline .
  Next page