Example sentences of "[verb] from having [art] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ( Perhaps this is why it is claimed that boys ' academic performance is higher in ‘ mixed ’ schools than in ‘ boys only ’ schools : they benefit from having a whole group to be better than !
2 They noted , however , that it was possible that excessive protectiveness could result from having an abnormal child rather than the reverse .
3 ‘ Of course , everything benefits from having a fresh look at it now and again .
4 Feet also suffer from having a Latin derivation ( pedes ) which is rather similar to other classical roots .
5 It is not that children of high intelligence are somehow debarred from having a rich and satisfying school life .
6 The eventual combination of colour , texture and tone seemed quite pleasing and I was particularly taken by the subtle effect that arose from having a different background colour beneath the corners and sides of the border .
7 If you do decide that you would gain from having a proper appraisal system then start with a simple approach and stick closely to it .
8 The confidence he had gained from having a loving wife was being undermined by a feeling of rejection from the public .
9 It depicts his early intellectual development as reducing to two moments of discovery , whereby he moves from having no coherent ideas to having just those ideas .
10 ‘ It 's not easy to change from having a regular wage to the uncertainty of the co-op , ’ says Santos .
11 The variety of course combinations may seem bewildering at first sight , but they result from having a flexible system which tries to allow you to move to new subjects if you find them more attractive than the subjects which you first chose .
12 Worshippers could only play music on Fridays and Sundays , were banned from having a bass drum , and could only use the church between 8am and 10pm .
  Next page