Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] from [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Their report shows that you 're most likely to fall ill visiting Egypt , Gambia , Turkey and Latin America , while 18 per cent of Spanish holiday-makers suffer from some kind of lurgy . |
2 | However , the proportion of cases deriving from this estimate of misplaced anal cancers actually decreased during 1943–77 . |
3 | In 1953 there was a move to ‘ modernise ’ the Peppard trophies but nothing appears to have been agreed , for today the old ‘ Taylor Cup ’ is unchanged and clearly dated 1895 , its winners listed from that date . |
4 | As a starting point in our treatment of such systems we shall develop a model of an ideal solution and then show how real or non-ideal solutions deviate from this model . |
5 | The inspector , however , found that any bonuses deriving from this design ‘ have been lost and also much of the experience and skill of the ‘ old Feltham ’ which coped well with a difficult borstal population' . |
6 | The number of usable questionnaires received from each country ranged from zero to fifteen . |
7 | Sectors and units borrow from each other in many different ways . |
8 | Remember how many goals came from that partnership on the right . |
9 | The level of Norse and French influence is equal in terms of a simple count of loanwords — about thirty words adopted from each language are found in Dame Sirith — but the presence of Scandinavian loanwords is dialectally more diagnostic , in this case again confirming an East Midland origin . |
10 | Whilst period pain may be helped each month by remedies selected from this table , the recurrent nature of these problems is unlikely to be affected until a more constitutional approach is adopted . |
11 | Tracey made a tree with an equal number of rods protruding from each side and all of the same size . |
12 | Its qualifications for taming England supporters look from this distance more compelling than even Sardinia 's . |
13 | Two imperatives flowed from this perspective . |
14 | He warned that material shortages resulting from such export bans were bringing many enterprises to a standstill . |
15 | The funds raised from this programme will be received by the University Development Trust and will be used to award scholarships and bursaries ; to improve facilities for disabled students ; to enhance library holdings , and to enable the University to support new developments in scholarship and research . |
16 | I wish him and his friends no evil , ’ said Bishop Jon , shaking down his book-satchel and peering into it , ‘ but it 's a difficult thing to make plans for your country with them sitting there , their heads switching from this shoulder to the other , and so sleek you would think it was a cow that licked them all . |
17 | Any changes to a style ( possibly to an ancestor style held centrally on the network ) will permeate to all other styles inheriting from this style . |
18 | The most commonly prescribed drugs were hypnotics to make young children sleep and anti-depressants for treating bedwetting , plus tranquillizers for teenagers suffering from some kind of psychological disturbance . |
19 | Some socialisation takes place on an extremely particular level : for example , individual families will in many respects differ from each other and as a result the content of much of the socialisation characteristic of each will be correspondingly variable . |
20 | It was perhaps inevitable that one of the benefits that both the wives and husbands saw from this approach was a reduction in stock losses . |
21 | An interesting difference between B.Eds and PGCEs emerged from this question on modes of assessment . |
22 | This commonality is demonstrated by examination of entries taken from each dictionary . |
23 | The savings come from less absenteeism , lower insurance costs , more productivity , fewer deaths ( Weis calls this ‘ much lower rates of worker mortality ’ ) , not so much deterioration in furniture , carpets and so on , including office machines , less maintenance and less spent on air-conditioning and heating . |
24 | The system also provides the facility to transfer small numbers of entries chosen from any part of the dictionary to the typesetting contractor and to the Working-Set . |
25 | His almost pathological dread of producing a legato line means that instead of drawing us a picture of clear , flowing melodies he leaves little join-up-the-dots type sketches with the notes separated from each other by wide open spaces which even the generous resonance of St Peter 's , Waltrop ( near Dortmund ) can not adequately fill . |
26 | Gharial females bury up to forty eggs , usually in two tiers separated from each other by a thick layer of sand . |
27 | Care should be taken when working with soffits made from any material containing asbestos . |
28 | On all sides the air is filled with music and a mixture of languages as young people from all over Europe get together to enjoy the pleasures of this picturesque resort that has so much to offer in such a small space — last year we counted over 15 different hostelries , none more than five minutes walk from each other ! |
29 | This is also reflected in an aggregate geographical sense where whole areas suffer from this problem , while others have markedly increased their share . |
30 | And the competence checklists came from that training course I was on , that 's saying everybody , as well as having a job description , you 've got to have a competence ch checklist , for that that er helps you to develop the training for the job , depending on the competencies you need . |