Example sentences of "[adj] from [art] [noun] [unc] " in BNC.

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1 He was not supposed to know whether the dealer was buying or selling on his client 's behalf , but nonetheless he attempted to guess this from the runner 's facial expression and comments .
2 To distinguish this from the actor 's concern to communicate to non-participants , we have used the term ‘ presentation ’ .
3 Other contributors who are working within this tradition ( Brenda Almond , Morwenna Griffiths , Mary Midgley and Anne Seller ) also consider in what ways central philosophical issues might look different from a women 's ( or feminist ) points of view .
4 But the dismissal of a chief constable is very different from a company 's claim for damages .
5 Or , at least , the bat 's sensation of her mate may be no more different from my visual sensation of a flamingo , than my visual sensation of a flamingo is different from a flamingo 's visual sensation of a flamingo .
6 But the tone of the report is quite different from the GATT 's previous review , published in 1991 , which was harshly critical .
7 Different from the time the Radiological Protection Unit had been out , and different from the Boilermakers ' stoppage .
8 Evidently Luke 's own assessment of the problem 's urgency was somewhat different from the caller 's own .
9 However , in 1938 the ‘ Britons fight for Britain only ’ and ‘ Mosley and Peace ’ campaigns , although based on assumptions different from the government 's appeasement policies and having no influence upon them , nevertheless harmonized quite well with the general drift of public opinion with regard to European intervention and the threat of war .
10 Our commitment is very different from the Government 's .
11 It was so different from the artist 's usual work that without the bold signature , the single surname , Dalgliesh might have wondered if it was , in fact , his work .
12 Under the presiding genius of Roger , bishop of Salisbury , Henry 's most brilliant administrator — said to have been first chosen as chaplain by Henry ( whose tastes were different from the Confessor 's ) for the speed with which he could finish his mass — the English financial departments were achieving something of the efficiency and maturity of their Sicilian counterparts .
13 it is rather like highlighting the lion 's view of captivity , it implies that this is demonstrably different from the tiger 's view , and this draws attention away from the significant fact of captivity .
14 Dyer 's doings are the same as but also different from those investigated by the fretful man he resembles , just as Hawksmoor 's investigative Scotland Yard is the same as but also different from the architects ' department of that name attended by Dyer .
15 They were so different from the dustman 's horses and those that pulled the water carts .
16 For Sue Poole , whose husband Nick is a Sergeant , living here is somewhat different from the family 's home town of Tewkesbury .
17 Twenty or so fishing boats were moored to the pierside , fresh from a night 's work .
18 I think it was her smell that got me started … like the braided loaves fresh from the baker 's oven .
19 It remains inherently dependent from the client 's point of view .
20 It seems that it was a hasty decision to take away the armoured car , which had become inseparable from the city 's history .
21 The abundance of mobile living rooms is clear from the firm 's own client base .
22 It became clear from the Government 's autumn statement that pressure on public expenditure is likely to get worse rather than better for the foreseeable future , and that any developments must take place within such a framework .
23 It is clear from the man 's record that he was an ally of a man who escaped from Northern Ireland and who is wanted in Northern Ireland to pay part of the price for the crime that he committed .
24 It was clear from the sentencer 's observations that he had given careful consideration to these matters .
25 But it is not clear from the duke 's company accounts exactly how much of Mayfair he owns .
26 It seems clear from the overseers ' accounts for the late 18th century that two of the four adult Titford brothers were living as occupants of houses once held as leasehold properties by their better-off ancestors .
27 With two World Cups now under the IB 's belt though , it seems pretty clear from the post mortems which followed the first event in Australia and New Zealand , and the one held nine months ago in France , the U.K. and Ireland , that making money in this new era of professionalism is almost as important , if not equal in importance , to the game itself .
28 It was clear from the governor 's demeanour that his invitation did not extend beyond the Americans , and the elderly mandarin remained standing apart with his son and his son 's wife .
29 This is clear from the Attorney-General 's statement in Parliament that the practice in its widest form was lawful : a curious ( though not unprecedented ) anticipation of a judicial decision by the Government 's senior law officer and a member of the executive ( Adeney and Lloyd , 1986 : 104 ) .
30 A fortune awaits any engineer who can devise a way of transferring , in real time , a sequence of animation direct from a computer 's memory to video tape or film .
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