Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] from [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 French Professor stands down from British transplant centre
2 The last American Air Force Squadron at RAF Upper Heyford stands down from active duty today .
3 high or low — drop-outs — repeating — transfers in from other schools
4 Pandarus ' prose not only proves that he does n't take Troilus seriously , so turning our reaction towards a scepticism that stands off from full involvement , but in time it establishes the speaker as a matter-of-fact fixer , who is not only alien to romance but coarsens whatever he touches .
5 The titles of both poems suffered change , and The Ruined Cottage is to be found incorporated in the first Book of The Excursion , where Wordsworth looks back from 1814 to the year 1795 :
6 She almost has a three D effect , I er , you know her face really stands out from that background .
7 Oulton 's paintings may serve as a reminder that each looks out from different eyes with one 's own conception of what is real , thus the artist leads us to question the truth of our own vision .
8 This concerns the stages a case goes through from initial instructions to its conclusion and the physical appearance of the file throughout that time .
9 For a granular superconductor with grain size of L , the functional form of the excess conductivity crosses over from three-dimensional behaviour to zero-dimensional behaviour when the Ginzburg-Landau coherence length ( T ) exceeds L/3 as T approaches T c ( ref. 10 ) .
10 The raw copy which floods in from many sources is ‘ tasted ’ , selected , sub-edited and , in a remarkably short space of time , some of it appears on the printed page .
11 Bono wakes up from some sort of indulgent ( but more realistic than you realise ) reverie .
12 A further dog-leg stair leads up from this level to second-floor guest accommodation located entirely in the roof space framed by the original trusses , and a narrow bridge leads across from the head of the stair to a complementary study balcony ( Fig 38 ) .
13 A newel staircase leads up from either end .
14 then it goes up from eight ninety to fifteen pounds .
15 Between London and Brighton , the cost goes up from two thousand on hundred and seventy six to two thousand three hundred and eight .
16 The highest rate of personal income tax ( if you earn more than $200,000 ) goes up from 31 per cent to 36 per cent — raising maybe $10 billion for the Treasury , a mere down payment on the first Clinton domestic schemes .
17 Those lenders who have announced their new rates are the Skipton which goes up from 13.4 per cent to 14.65 per cent ( 14.9 for higher risk lending ) from Monday and Stroud and Swindon which is putting its rate up by 1 per cent to 14.5 per cent immediately for new borrowers and from 1 November for existing loans .
18 He takes over from Alloa-based Derek Allison who has moved on to be British national coach .
19 Ian Cordial , 64 , takes over from retiring chairman John Tholen at the beginning of April .
20 In general , hot-wires are more sensitive at low speeds than high ; however , if the speed is too low , free-convection heat transfer takes over from forced convection , making the cooling insensitive to velocity .
21 Erm , and providing the T G I manual takes over from that point and covers all the requirements .
22 Well they used to , if a battery could n't be , you can charge it up but if it breaks through from one cell to the other a a across with sediment in the bottom , so it gaps that cell and that cell so you can charge it forever because the one 's discharging the other with the sediment that 's arrested in the bottom cos i it 's like putting a connection across , so it never actually charges .
23 If the Government backs off from this promise and retreats into ‘ average ’ discharges , avoiding mention of breaches of licences , public confidence in the bill will be undermined .
24 Will my right hon. Friend ensure that the message goes out from British trade missions throughout the United States to American firms contemplating investing in Britain that we operate an open free market economy with low taxation and that we have no intention of introducing unnecessary social costs which would make business less competitive ?
25 Kochan points out from 1895 to 1905 the strike movement grew , increasingly it had political rather than simple economic concerns .
26 Nevertheless , though she may not recognise the name it goes by from any catalogue of thou-shalt-nots , our Riva knows an abomination when she sees one .
27 But the second half of the lyric moves on from this : the completion of the line looks back to what has gone before in its rhyme , but syntactically and alliteratively it moves forward to convey the perception of that very still mourning symptomatic of the inner spiritual movement of Christ 's coming .
28 The session which follows on from late night deliberations comes amid predictions that tomorrow 's Commons Euro vote will be a dramatic cliffhanger .
29 Alan Parker follows on from controversial success with MISSISSIPPI BURNING to another examination of racial inequality and hatred .
30 This research follows on from that reported in Deregulating Telecoms : Competition and Control in the United States , Japan and Britain ( Frances Pinter , 1986 ) where the processes of liberalisation and privatisation of domestic and international telecommunications were compared .
  Next page