Example sentences of "derive [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He comments : ‘ It is not a person 's maleness which constitutes that person the representative image of Christ , but a person 's having the sacerdotal character , the instrumental priestly power to perform those actions signifying the giving of divine gifts , a power deriving through ordination from Christ , the donor of God 's grace . ’
2 This is true in 80% of the first related papers in Appendix 5 , where a total of 97 papers ( 30% ) appear to derive from field mapping .
3 This is true in 80% of the first related papers in Appendix 5 , where a total of 97 papers ( 30% ) appear to derive from field mapping .
4 Once new fields are delineated they come to be seen as natural , their boundaries appear to derive from logic , and a world in which they had no place becomes unimaginable .
5 The backfill material contained a considerable amount of pottery , which was stylistically attributable to the second half of the eleventh century AD , along with much burnt clay or daub thought to derive from wattle walls .
6 The alluvial marsh was supposed to have been the site of an ancient royal swannery , and to have contributed the first syllable to the name Swanwic , mentioned in Domesday , though Old English ‘ swan ’ appears to derive from swineherd .
7 The rights and duties of individuals towards each other are together known as private law which in Anglo-Saxon countries , such as Britain and the United States , tends to derive from custom as incorporated by judges through time in what is known in Britain as the common law .
8 His water-colours acquired an increasingly remote and sometimes visionary quality , deriving in part from the delicacy of texture and colour which he achieved through a technique based on the miniaturist 's use of hatching and stippling , developed to an extraordinary degree of refinement .
9 The consensus popular music repertoire of the late 1920s , 1930s and 1940s covers a relatively narrow stylistic spread , bounded by theatre song on the one side , novelty items deriving from music hall and vaudeville traditions on the other , with Tin Pan Alley song , Hollywood hits and crooners in between .
10 The neighbourhood effect apart , contemporary urban sociology ( especially that deriving from Marxism ) envisages local variations in politics and forms of state intervention as straightforwardly the product of the particular balance of class relations constituting a particular locality .
11 Part 5 considered two contending theories of perversion and homosexuality , one deriving from psychoanalysis , the other from anthropological , sociological , and historical perspectives , in which Foucault 's History of Sexuality was both a culmination and a new departure .
12 A recasting of the whole system , away from the Beveridge-style insurance base to the payment of benefits as a right of citizenship , would enable age discrimination to be abolished through the removal of ‘ need ’ categories , deriving from ageist assumptions .
13 Our sex is sex between people of the same gender , which automatically removes the actual or symbolic inequalities deriving from gender difference .
14 THESE clubs are characterised by having an above average proportion of their revenue deriving from cricket .
15 Further south is the interesting Church of S. Pietro at Tuscánia , deriving from Roman and Lombard sources .
16 In addition , most information comes from official statistics , especially from the Inland Revenue , deriving from tax returns and death duties .
17 We have already discussed the leverage deriving from control over expertise .
18 All States are non-parties to the declaration of any other State , but an accepting State is a party to ‘ the system of the Optional Clause in relation to the other declarant States , with all the rights and obligations deriving from Article 36 ’ .
19 This entitles Newco to repayments of tax credits attaching to the dividends , deriving from Target 's liability to pay ACT in respect of such dividends .
20 The recognition phase is the run-time application of the information derived during development .
21 Equations ( 10.13 ) and ( 10.14 ) are actually derived for monodisperse samples , and when measurements are performed with heterodisperse polymers , the appropriate averages to use are M n and .
22 So the languages have been derived for convenience of mathematical calculations and most people are not very good at mathematics , and they find the kind of symbolism used unnatural and unfriendly .
23 In his analysis of the popular culture which appeared among the promoters of the Pro-Life Campaign , set up to achieve a constitutional ban on abortion in the Republic in 1983 , O'Carroll pin-points certain characteristics , which can be abbreviated here : a monolithic and absolute view of the world , with its accompanying intolerance , derived in part from the direct consultation of clerics and politicians on public moral issues and the subsequent failure to develop an ethos of public debate ; a localized belief system , rooted in family and communal authority and issuing in a spirit of absolute conformity ; sexual prudery , a product partly of the inheritance problem ; and the development of acute anxiety when such beliefs — inhering partly as they do in their practice and shaping of society — are threatened .
24 At the risk of being accused of being a pedlar of yet another quack remedy I wish to argue that a rights-based theory , derived in part from the influential rights thesis recently put forward by Ronald Dworkin ( Dworkin , 1978 ) , is also capable of addressing some of these difficulties confronted by our orthodox political and constitutional theories , in addition to its more immediate relevance with regard to the specific issue of tax diversion ( Dignan , 1983 ) , and other civil libertarian issues ; though to do so it stands in need of some revision .
25 The crusading spirit of the early members of Annales derived in part from their opposition to the way history was practised .
26 Buried beneath the sensationalism — for Punk Rock 's public face was nothing if not lurid — was a considered critique — derived in part from libertarian theories like Situationism , a big influence in the sixties and since — of pop music and youth culture 's place at the cutting edge of consumer capitalism .
27 All authorities had some sort of proposal on paper by that year , derived in part from the regional advisory reports of earlier years .
28 In conjunction with considerable manual dexterity derived in part from the ability to oppose thumb and index finger which man shares with the gelada baboon and presumably derives from the same source ( picking up small objects of the diet ) , the adoption of an upright posture created the right conditions for the final emancipation of the hand from locomotion and set man on the path which led to the invention and use of tools and to material culture in general .
29 Comparison of this expression with that derived in Chap .
30 Assuming , however , that since the highest-ranked journal for the publication of Scottish geological research is the Scottish Journal of Geology ( SJG ) , then that journal 's rejected papers do contain some derived from thesis research .
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