Example sentences of "derive from the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ The most frequently asked question is : What does the customer expect to derive from the implementation of electronic point of sale ( EPoS ) ? ’
2 The precise meaning of this formulation is unclear — does it mean ‘ lose self-control and kill ’ , or ‘ lose self-control and kill in the way D did ’ — but it seems to derive from the notion that there are degrees of loss of self-control .
3 His unchecked activities are thought to derive from the strong support he enjoys from the Serbian government , which is either unwilling or unable to deactivate him .
4 The ceremony is said to derive from the day in the year 52 when San Barnaba did the same thing outside the walls of Milan to symbolize the city 's conversion to Christianity .
5 The main problem seems to derive from the positivist expectation that social explanation of soil erosion should be tested in the same way as most natural science ones .
6 For it was thought that the generalist could , whenever he wanted to , add a specialist dimension to his knowledge , but general concepts were less easy to derive from the specialist .
7 He admits also that Buddhism displayed a tendency to participation as it spread out from India into other countries , though he fails to recognize the examples of participation which might be said to derive from the communal life of the sangha and so insists that it is the principle of identity that predominates .
8 As Canguilhem says , ‘ the efficacy of the psychologist … lacks a firm foundation as long as it can not be proved to derive from the application of a science ( 1980 : 37 ) .
9 These cruel and sadistic impulses were thought , at this point in the theory , to derive from the active , male element of dominating another in the act of sexual intercourse .
10 The decoration on the discs , which seldom have names on , is usually either a variation of the Christian monogram IHS , or else the so-called ‘ Basque cross ’ , which is a little like a four-leafed clover and has sometimes been argued , in an attempt to find an origin for the Basques in the East , to derive from the old Hindu symbol of the swastika .
11 I could also appreciate that the bulk of this supposed humour was meant to derive from the anachronism of the play 's sexual mores .
12 The power of the elite is held to derive from the greater intensity and quality of the sentiments or residues of its members which give its members the will and the ability to maintain their own rule either by force or by consent ( but not usually both , according to Pareto ) .
13 Although emphasis was initially upon recognition of the variety of landscape features , sediments and structures that could be developed under periglacial conditions , the potential subsequently arose of developing a greater knowledge of phases of periglacial landscape development , and in Poland and other countries in Europe this emphasis was clearly evident in research in the 1960s and much of the research was reflected in Periglacial Geomorphology ( Embleton and King , 1975 ) which was one of two books to derive from the earlier Glacial and Periglacial Geomorphology ( Embleton and King , 1968 ) .
14 The new restrictions were thought to derive from the Prime Minister 's concern at what he saw as the growing influence of " exclusivist " religions such as Christianity and Islam .
15 Moreover , we showed that indomethacin inhibited chemiluminescence elicited by stimulation of a suspension of neutrophils by FMLP , a system in which oxygen free radicals are not though to derive from the cyclo-oxygenase reaction .
16 The bulk of the benefits are seen to derive from the effects of increased competition and lower costs which lead to lower prices , and also stimulate investment .
17 In many of the cases brought against experts , where full arbitral status did not seem appropriate , the expert 's immunity was said to derive from the fact that the expert 's status was that of a " quasi-arbitrator " , or that the expert was " in the position of an arbitrator " , or that an expert was " in the nature of an arbitrator " .
18 The greatest error is likely to derive from the migration component .
19 Above all , however , this chapter is intended to begin a debate about the methodological and theoretical influence upon research of ‘ sensitivity ’ , whether deriving from the sensitivity of the topic , its location , or both .
20 This would seem very close to the ‘ bow-wow ’ theory of linguistic evolution , one of the theories much discussed in Eliot 's youth , which saw language as deriving from the imitation of natural sounds .
21 This combination of various voices , including the choric , makes the fifth section distinctly dramatic in its fragmentation , and , clearly deriving from the techniques employed in The Waste Land , also paves the way for the fragmentary drama of Sweeney Agonistes .
22 ‘ Not only the members of the small governing class but every squire , tradesman and farmer who could afford to modernize or rebuild his house , even the parson , deputy of Christ , lived behind a façade which was conceived in the terms of a Classical Order , entered his home through a doorway deriving from the portico of a pagan shrine and sat at a hearth which resembled a miniature triumphal arch or an altar to the Lares . ’
23 Throughout the nineteenth century there were faint waves of Adventism , deriving from the Judaic roots at the heart of the Christian faith .
24 The reasoning behind this proposal seems to be that the two parties are adult , and any exploitation deriving from the family tie seems no more likely than in other adult relationships .
25 They interpreted this finding as showing that associability lost by the stimulus during the first stage of training could outweigh the transfer deriving from the fact that both stage of the study involved inhibitory learning .
26 The problems discussed in this section are not necessarily separate from those outlined as deriving from the colonial model , indeed they frequently overlap .
27 Often the request is based on the enjoyment the human is deriving from the pet .
28 This meant , Hillingdon concluded , that ‘ needs have a predetermined boundary deriving from the people who are supplying the library service and reflecting their own cultural and educational goals .
29 Although I hated the very idea of selling things to people who might not want to buy them ( even if it was good for them ) I made quite a few sales , the main commission deriving from the sale of a Group Insurance Scheme to 32 men from the Times-Herald staff .
30 The ‘ boy labour problem ’ was a feature of the larger social and political issues which dominated the Edwardian era , and obviously one that came to be taken seriously by contemporaries , in terms of the efficient functioning of the labour-market in general , and of specific problems deriving from the market , such as un- and underemployment , industrial training , casual and unskilled labour and , in the wider sphere , poverty and family morale .
  Next page