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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But such women also frequently work separately from women 's groups where participants ' age is not specified : an indication that these apparently age-free groups do not deal adequately with their interests .
2 Water-fleas ( Daphnia ) , blood-worms and a few other kinds of small animal can be purchased cheaply from aquarists ' shops , where they are sold as live food for tropical fish .
3 Removing many eggs at once from women 's bodies , has led to ’ egg donation ’ .
4 Animal insulins continue to be needed both from patients ' and from doctors ' points of view .
5 So many books , to pick up a point once made by Malcolm Bradbury , are published primarily to be stored , moving smoothly from publishers ' warehouse to library stacks without arousing much disturbance on the way , and are discussed , if at all , only in scholarly journals .
6 JOINING top children 's TV show Blue Peter proved far from kids ' stuff for new girl Anthea Turner .
7 Only one part of cottage pointing in right direction , i.e. rear part , but even from kids ' bedroom only trees visible .
8 Many protect themselves even from patients ' questions , by always being very busy or emotionally unapproachable .
9 After lunch , either from members ' own nosebags or from the Museum café , we reboarded our coach and set off on a magical mystery tour in search of Butterley and the M.R.C. It is quite fun ‘ turning round ’ on a fairly busy main road in a large coach !
10 Apart from widows ' and widowers ' benefits , the scheme is non-contributory .
11 Written dialogue in which , as here , source markers are suspended is at once nearer to and farther from children 's experience than is the form with source markers present .
12 The feeling is growing that since the occupiers of rural land benefit considerably from tax-payers ' money then tax-payers should have access to , and a degree of control over the use of such land .
  Next page