Example sentences of "derive from [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | 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 . |
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 | 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 . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | 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 . |
6 | 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 . |
7 | 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 . |
8 | 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 . |
9 | 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 . |
10 | 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 . |
11 | Our sex is sex between people of the same gender , which automatically removes the actual or symbolic inequalities deriving from gender difference . |
12 | THESE clubs are characterised by having an above average proportion of their revenue deriving from cricket . |
13 | Further south is the interesting Church of S. Pietro at Tuscánia , deriving from Roman and Lombard sources . |
14 | In addition , most information comes from official statistics , especially from the Inland Revenue , deriving from tax returns and death duties . |
15 | We have already discussed the leverage deriving from control over expertise . |
16 | 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 ’ . |
17 | 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 . |
18 | 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 . |
19 | 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 . |
20 | The same result may derived from field theory in the following manner . |
21 | While the flair derived from street football in Africa is richly prized adjusting to a Wiltshire training pitch in January is not straightforward . |
22 | Grown-up critics manage to deny its appeal ( probably the very same priapic excitement they derived from rock in their unreconstructed youth ) because it seems to be at odds with their sexual politics . |
23 | In the first , which the author derived from Abbess Aelfflaed , herself an eye-witness , who died in 713 ( HE 111 , 24 ; AU s.a. 712 : AT p. 222 ) , Aldfrith is said to have urged his successor , whoever he might be , to come to terms with Wilfrid ( Vita Wilfridi , ch. 59 ) , and in the second , seemingly later version , to have urged his son and heir , Osred , to do so ( Vita Wilfridi , ch. 60 ) . |
24 | In this case the residual d Q is 20 ( figure 10.7 ) , compared with an original d Q of 26 ( derived from column 2 of figure 10.2 ) ; the spread has been reduced to around three-quarters its original size . |
25 | The activity and episode checklists in the Appendix are derived from SCAN ) . |
26 | This suggests that the mare basalts and the highland rocks have both been derived from mantle rocks of intermediate density . |
27 | The applicability of such data derived from uranium miners to the general population is central to the radon issue . |
28 | Nonetheless , the incongruence of rRNA-based phylogenies with molecular trees derived from elongation factors or DNA-dependent RNA polymerases presents a challenge to molecular evolutionists . |
29 | The Christianity that coalesced and took shape in Constantine 's time was in fact a hybrid , containing significant skeins of thought derived from Mithraism and from the sun cult . |
30 | There have been some investigations into determining how fully lexicons derived from machine readable dictionaries are able to cover unseen text . |