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

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1 Faecal E coli from patients with ulcerative colitis have been shown to differ from isolates from non-colitics in being markedly more adherent to human epithelial cells in vitro .
2 He describes the neo-Darwinian approach taken by ethologists , concentrates on the behavioural ecology of Old World monkeys and apes in an attempt to extrapolate from animals to man , and examines the political objections to sociobiology .
3 All business tends to suffer from periods of under-capitalisation which stifle investment and expansion plans .
4 The system is therefore liable to suffer from inaccuracies of the type discussed above .
5 Crohn 's disease patients and their relatives are more likely to suffer from disorders with a known or suspected autoimmune origin than members of the general population .
6 He was to suffer from bouts of explosive flatulence for the rest of his life .
7 This was partly for the reasons discussed in Chapter 3 : more elderly people and medical advances which enabled more of them to benefit from treatments like joint replacement at even more advanced ages .
8 In an industry dominated by much larger producers who were able to benefit from economies of scale , the government therefore concluded that the sale to Ford was preferable to continued state subsidy and/or ever closer links with Honda .
9 Where risk has increased there is an increasing need for capital to provide a buffer against loss … the removal of the old protective barriers led to a rush by the smaller players to merge with new , bigger partners both to benefit from economies of scale and scope and to augment their capital base sufficiently to meet the requirements of the new , more demanding market context …
10 British industry , the City of London , most of what used to be called Fleet Street , and the economic spokesmen for all the political parties have for many years spoken with one voice on this matter : what Britain required , they all said , was a large , secure home market in which it was possible to benefit from economies of scale comparable to those enjoyed by the Japanese and the Americans .
11 The Group , which intends to operate nationally , does not set an upper limit on the size of customer , but expects 80 per cent of its work to come from companies with a turnover of between £0.5M to £5M .
12 Many of the gradual developments are likely to come from groups in the Oxford environment .
13 Firstly , their income is less likely than the rest of the population to come from earnings from employment ; and more likely to be derived from pensions from the state or from past employers or from savings .
14 The strongest opposition is likely to come from supporters of nuclear power , which was cut sharply in the Clinton budget .
15 Ministers still stand by Lawther 's conclusion that only 10 per cent of lead in the human body is likely to come from additives in petrol .
16 Forty-eight hours earlier , the Cabinet had agreed in principle to the Big Five's recommended savings of 70 million , of which nearly 50 million was to come from cuts in unemployment benefits .
17 All of these sera proved to come from patients with Crohn colitis .
18 If we wish to study Lake Tahoe from the point of view of hydrology , fauna and water quality we may find it necessary to extract from maps of these features the polygonal area defining the extent of the lake .
19 What questions do you want to know from customers about , what d' ya wan na know about them ?
20 If the New-York Historical Society wants to deaccession works to pay for operating expenses , legislators who help fund the Society should have some veto power over those sales , particularly if works of art and other objects of local interest threaten to pass from museums into private hands .
21 By the end of the 32/33 season , the club was well placed to progress from friendlies to Junior League soccer .
22 Learning to parascend from water-skis at fifty-nine ?
23 These estates have a relatively high turnover of residents , as new workers and their families are posted to Shetland , others return to the south and some move into private housing in the locality , leaving the estate to escape from feelings of social claustrophobia .
24 In the pursuit of his fortune , he had deliberately travelled many long and distant journeys , always seeking to escape from memories of Beth and their time together .
25 Liable to escape from collections of ornamental waterfowl. 23 — 27 in. ( 58 — 69 cm . ) .
26 Yet the very need for academic subjects to escape from allegations of ‘ practical utility ’ may yet lead to irresistible pressure for change in the period of economic malaise which we currently confront .
27 There are lubricants like KY jelly and Senselle to buy from chemists without prescription — and considerably more pleasant to use than petroleum jelly .
28 If you want to buy expensive goods , the best advice must be to buy from stores in Britain ( because here , your complaint is with the retailer , not the manufacturer ) and to campaign for EC consumer protection laws .
29 In all probability the machine would be replaced once the ‘ laugh ’ was over , and failure to do so might well lead to censure from others in the Rowdies group .
30 I 'd really love to hear from students of anthropology or English .
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