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

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1 The ultimate effect of a tax can be very different from its apparent effect .
2 Thus the late phases of a market culture are very different from its early phases .
3 The committees are empowered to suggest amendments , and the bill which is returned to the house ( if it ever is ) may be substantially different from its original form ; there may be a long period of debate between representatives of the two houses of the Legislature and the Executive before consensus can be reached .
4 In our view , rural development should be qualitatively different from its urban counterpart , given that the existence of narrow country lanes , agricultural activities and a dispersed settlement pattern make it necessary to develop a smaller scale pattern businesses closely related to existing enterprises .
5 Theirs is a distinctive type of cut-price retailing that emerged in Germany after the second world war and is subtly different from its American cousin .
6 ( a ) not less than 28 days before the change is implemented , of any change in the body 's name , registered office or principal office if different from its registered office ;
7 But , even assuming , first , that the oppression has indeed been lifted , second , that we can speak of , and know , a time when that desire was ever free , and third , that we can speak meaningfully of a ‘ natural ’ or a ‘ liberated ’ desire ( and my argument questions all three assumptions ) , even assuming all this , liberated desire would still always be different from its pre-oppression counterpart .
8 The CNAA 's processing of this submission was radically different from its previous practice .
9 Mac-to-PowerPC software start-up , Echo Logic ( UX No 385 ) , fresh from its triumphant debut , figures it has proved the feasibility of its concept and is now starting afresh to try and make the binary compiler technology , FlashPort , easy to use .
10 Fresh from its triumphant trawl through Liberal affairs , as it were , the Fourth Estate has been turning its prurient attention to the amours of Mr Phillip Schofield , the televisioniste turned stage performer .
11 the ‘ contradiction ’ is inseparable from the total structure of the social body in which it is found , inseparable from its formal conditions of existence , and even from the instances it governs ; it is radically affected by them , determining , but also determined in one and the same movement , and determined by the various levels and instances of the social formation it animates ; it might be called overdetermined in its principle .
12 Rather it is likely to depend on the expression by cervical cells of a novel octamer binding protein which displaces Oct-1 from its binding site in the URR and activates gene expression .
13 The British Parliament itself , like some others , is in fact a pre-democratic and pre-modern institution , as is manifest from its anachronistic construction , customs , language and overall ethos .
14 For all its surface vehemence , the second movement observes the explosion from a safe distance , the following allegretto is sluggish and mechanical , with little in the way of slyly pointed playing to sustain it — even the climax fails to break free from its rigid framework , and the Finale , despite a powerful , thrusting allegro , is dogged by a lethargic introduction .
15 Particularly in manufacturing , R&D is never quite free from its past projects and a substantial proportion of its resources must be earmarked for trouble-shooting arising from , for instance , the need to find a substitute for an obsolescent component before it is in short supply .
16 This is associated with the anomalous position of the G10 5' phosphate , which is displaced by 2 from its expected position in regular B-form DNA ( Fig. 3 b ) .
17 The manual for the knitmaster 155 gives an example for tuck where the double-length switch is used with card No 2 from its basic pack .
18 This logic is set out in a manner that illustrates in an exemplary way the structuralist intention to map out all the possibilities of literature as distinct from its actual manifestations .
19 In so far as top businessmen play a decisive role in company strategy — as distinct from its public presentation — the talents they need will vary from one situation to another .
20 It was natural , however , that the CNAA 's discussions — ; as distinct from its day-to-day validation activities — should focus , in the first half of the 1970s , on the most substantial new developments — either initiated by the CNAA or in response to initiatives elsewhere .
21 The smallest sandgrouse of the region , looking rather dark from its close barring , and one of the shorter-tailed group .
22 Certainly , judged from a purely clinical standpoint the Jubilate reveals all of the features of psychotic thought disorder , of which , chosen at random from its 1739 lines , we may cite just one example ( B590 — 4 ) :
23 Very much the unsung hero of Mercedes ' 190 range , the six-cylinder 2.6 has none of the cosmetic bravura that distinguishes the 2.5–16 from its lesser stablemates .
24 They are exempt from its noxious effects , for goodness is its own protection .
25 Dominating the room , like the massive skeleton of some even larger beast , was the fearsome engine , sleek from its last oiling .
26 The makers claim a range of more than 1,000 miles is feasible from its 17.6 gallon tank — it can do 64 mpg at a steady 56 mph ( or 46.5 mpg at 75 mph , and 37.8 mpg on the urban cycle ) .
27 German Economics Minister Jürgen Möllemann visited India on Nov. 19 , while on Nov. 8 German Economic Co-operation Minister Carl-Dieter Spranger announced that development assistance to India would be cut by 25 per cent in 1992 from its current level of DM395,000,000 ( US$245,000,000 ) because of India 's " excessive armament " .
28 Looking at the fossil animal itself , the first necessity is to reconstruct it as accurately as possible from its fragmentary remains .
29 If it is necessary to rotate arm A by , say , 450 clockwise from its current position , then the position and attitude of B will be affected .
30 Economic life , more generally , was to be regulated through a ‘ socialist market ’ , but with an improved system of social benefits to protect the disadvantaged from its worst effects .
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