Example sentences of "[to-vb] from [noun] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 O. spinea appears to differ from O. hamula in the following characters : 1 .
2 For instance a man who is over fifty and who smokes over twenty cigarettes a day is four times more likely to suffer from heart disease than a non-smoker of the same age .
3 This is in spite of the emerging medical consensus that people who drink up to four drinks or so a day live longer and are less likely to suffer from heart disease than either abstainers or heavy drinkers .
4 And you are 80% more likely to suffer from scalp inflammation if you have eczema or psoriasis anywhere on your body .
5 In the longer term the offspring of depressed mothers are more likely to suffer from childhood depression .
6 Everyone knows that you do n't have to play tennis to suffer from tennis elbow , likewise carpal tunnel is not the cause by vibrating hand tools .
7 If your puppy is one of the few to suffer from travel sickness , it is best to get it started on tablets as soon as possible .
8 The main reason why the long-run Phillips curve may have a negative slope is that workers may continue to suffer from money illusion in the long-run and so be prepared to accept money wage increases which fall short of the actual inflation rate .
9 She guarded her secret carefully , terrified she was going to suffer from morning sickness , which might give the game away to her mother , but she 'd been lucky .
10 Three organisations are to benefit from Hartlepool Council 's lottery fund .
11 Hospital to benefit from canoe marathon
12 Yet beyond this general expectation he did not pressure them too early , at one point he seriously doubted whether Hideki was fitted to benefit from university study .
13 Patients who experience recurrent depressive episodes of an endogenous nature , including those who also show hypomanic or manic mood swings , are likely to benefit from lithium carbonate therapy ( Davis 1976 ) .
14 As we narrow down the proportion of the labour market that appears to benefit from lifetime employment in Japan , we get closer to the proportion of labour in Western countries employed by large companies who work to seniority wage profiles that offer accumulating reward for experience .
15 Some Western conservationists have welcomed Martin 's departure but local conservationist groups generally supported his policy of giving local communities an interest in preserving wildlife by allowing them to benefit from wildlife management schemes .
16 Initially , while the UK catches up with countries such as Canada [ there are 30 filling stations in Toronto alone ] it is likely to be the depot-based high mileage fleets that will be the first to benefit from NGV technology .
17 But do n't expect your fellow students to constitute a representative cross-section of the community at large — if only because they contain an above-average proportion of younger people and others who are most able to sustain continuous study and to benefit from college education .
18 But they are less likely to benefit from family living close by to support them .
19 Staff in Reference Services continued to benefit from Wednesday morning training sessions , and took part in a two-day Customer Care training course during the Annual Closed Week .
20 Indeed , the development of the Euro-currency market meant that most large organizations became increasingly aware of the possibility of switching funds between currencies in order to make capital gains ( or avoid capital losses ) and to benefit from interest rate differentials .
21 In the future , more detailed assessment of functional capability — eg , aerobic exercise capacity and the assessment of haemodynamic responses to exercise or pharmacological manipulation — may provide additional prognostic information and help to identify patients who are unlikely to benefit from ICD therapy .
22 The convention laid down provisions for Third World states to benefit from technology transfer and financial aid to help them preserve key areas , and , most controversially , it provided for compensation payments to Third World states in return for extraction of genetic resources ( seen as referring in particular to the exploitation of the gene bank of tropical forests by biotechnology companies ) .
23 It laid down provisions for third world states to benefit from technology transfer and financial aid to help them preserve key areas , and for compensation payments in return for extraction of their genetic resources ( seen as referring in particular to the exploitation of the gene bank of tropical forests by biotechnology companies ) .
24 One of the simplest ways to benefit from crystal power is to wear one .
25 The four hundred and ninety-five thousand lorry loads of stone needed to build the pyramid which the students planned as their mausoleum , were to come from Headington quarry .
26 Half of Canada 's acid rain is said to come from US power stations .
27 They are to come from Grove Farm , just as you recommended , 12 Rhode Islands and 6 pullets .
28 In Stroud it has to come from hospital time .
29 Barry Mayes of the RSPB said the money will have to come from priority conservation work .
30 The carbon deposit was thought to come from car exhaust fumes from a large car park close to the church .
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