Example sentences of "[noun] [vb past] from [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Long black hair tumbled from the top of the boy 's head .
2 This case arose from a contract under which the pursuers , an engineering company , were to supply and install a conveyor belt system at the premises of the defenders , a brickmaking company .
3 The case arose from a magazine article accusing him of having revealed details of President Kurt Waldheim 's alleged Nazi past to an SPÖ conference in October 1985 .
4 The prince limped from the polo field at Smith 's Lawn , Windsor , yesterday and lay in agony on the sidelines after straining his back .
5 She felt the steel strength of his arms around her and her skin quivered from the warmth of his breath on her cheek before he released her as if she might contaminate him .
6 The discovery , in 1945 by Brotzu in Sardinia , of antibiotic activity in a species of Cephalosporium recovered from the sea near a sewage outfall was brought to Florey 's attention by a former British public health officer and led to work at Oxford and elsewhere on this and similar organisms .
7 The need to hire coaches arose from the fact the Supporters ' Club actively discouraged membership from fans under the age of 18 .
8 This technique arose from the inability of a child to perform the ‘ rituals ’ of the adult psychoanalytical tradition in couch-based sessions of verbal exposition .
9 Does the Minister accept that the vast majority of people in Scotland recognise and understand international obligations , and that the whole problem of the Iraqi contract arose from a feeling that something was being put through behind the scenes ?
10 The right of the pursuers to rescind the contract arose from the principle of mutuality and the materiality of the defenders ' breach , but the intention of the defenders is also relevant .
11 as if in reply an almost palpable sulphurous wave arose from the dog and eddied around me .
12 Moodie led from the start and never looked like being caught even though late in the race Joey Dunlop put in a spurt and was in second place with one lap to go .
13 The second difficulty arose from a proposition in St. Augustine in which Galileo saw some mileage .
14 A further difficulty arose from the departure of a large number of middle-class families from the Belfast area to neighbouring dormitory towns , a migratory pattern in line with changes in the demography of British cities generally for the last two decades or so .
15 This change arose from a realization that war provided opportunities for the nobles not only to increase their honour and their prestige but also to enrich themselves .
16 The decision arose from a claim lodged with the ECJ by a group of mainly Spanish-owned fishing companies , employing vessels registered as British , that amendments to the UK 1988 Merchant Shipping Act which excluded 95 of their vessels from British waters were illegal under EC law and had exposed them to financial ruin .
17 The decision arose from the case of Nancy Curzon , who was allowed to die on Dec. 26 after a Missouri court authorized the removal of her feeding tube [ see p. 37911 ] .
18 My impression was that the members of the GPB were very concerned about the matter , but unfortunately no formal policy decision arose from the meeting and no action plan was devised .
19 Miss Honey asked from the head of the table .
20 The latter finding arose from an observation by Brown and his colleagues ( 1966 ) that patients discharged to live alone or in a hostel often fared rather better than those who went to live with a spouse or parent .
21 The Okapi projects arose from a research proposal entitled " Micro-computer networking in libraries !
22 As we walked , grouse rose from the heather , calling out in alarm , .
23 Mrs Langley rose from a chair by the fire and Alexandra was aware of her daughters and someone else on a sofa in the great square bay window ; and even as Mrs Langley was greeting her she could hear Rose say clearly , ‘ Well , whatever else she has n't got , she certainly has elegant clothes , ’ and Alexandra , stung out of all terror quite suddenly , said crisply , ‘ I will tell my aunt how much you admire her taste .
24 Marcus shouted from the doorway in that distinctly unfriendly tone of his and clapped his hands hard .
25 As soon as our visitors had gone , Holmes changed from the talker to the man of action .
26 Less than a minute later noise erupted from the drawing room and excited voices drifted down the hall .
27 McMaster moved from the seaside to take up a new teaching post in Drumahoe near Londonderry last week , and decided to make the break with the club he has served so well for a decade .
28 The decision stemmed from a suggestion by the Secretary/Manager Brian Lovelock sometime in 1984 during the period immediately following the redemption of the bonds .
29 At the latter , over the third quarter of the eighteenth century , slavers rose from a quarter to a third of the merchant fleet .
30 One interesting source of feedback arose from the EIS survey of its members in Further Education on the operation of the National Certificate : the survey was conducted during November and December 1987 .
  Next page