Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] off by [art] " in BNC.

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1 an electro cardiograph , it 's a tracing of the electrical il impulses from the heart given off by the heart and this chap came in he 'd never had one before and he was nervous anyway , so I 'm trying to put him at his ease and I , I put , you have to put like a rubber band round their arms and legs and attach erm electrodes to them , you do n't feel anything , you 're only measuring the electrical impulses given off by the heart
2 The helicopter and a standby vessel spotted a flare set off by the crew and stayed in the vicinity until the men were winched to safety by an RAF helicopter .
3 The perfumes and aromas exuded by their leaves and flowers on a warm sunny day give any garden a fourth dimension , and one of the charms of the Greek and Italian hillsides is the pungently aromatic fragrance given off by the herbs and shrubs .
4 But junior side Lisburn levelled with a superb backline move rounded off by a Brian Dale try which was splendidly converted by Jeff Alderdice .
5 An adventurer who has had a chunk of his person ripped off by a Skeleton takes 3 Wounds from the blow , in addition to normal damage .
6 Predators that never scavenge and always insist on eating freshly-killed prey will have their appetite switched off by a limp , static object .
7 Although the old colours ranged widely and included deep or light red , blue , ‘ grizzle ’ and all-white , nearly all had white finching and white on the belly and face and early selection was made for the famous white face in contrast to a deep , rich red body colour set off by the white brisket , belly , legs , shoulder stripe and tail switch .
8 This winter Koffmann has been reinterpreting Cabessal de lievre : instead of stuffing and braising the hare he lightly roasts the fillet and laps it in a deep spicy sauce grand veneur set off by a heap of nutty pates .
9 The spadefish swim faster in schools because of a slime given off by the swimming fish .
10 Information kept on a credit card would be wiped clean by the massive bursts of magnetism given off by the scanner .
11 A CAPTAIN had his finger bitten off by a lion on board ship .
12 She turned , arms flailing , head back , eyes open — but the gaping mouth would utter no more prophecies , her breath cut off by the red garrotte cord round her scrawny neck .
13 When , at the end of the Second World War , France was liberated , those who had collaborated excessively with the Germans often had their hair cut off by the French Resistance .
14 But later he stigmatised them as ‘ the social scum , the passively rotting mass thrown off by the lower layers of the old society . ’
15 When a bat detects heat it is actually sensing the infra-red radiation given off by a warm body .
16 However , some radiation will still find its way around even these substantial barriers , increasing the exposure to the workforce above what they would expect from the ‘ natural ’ radiation given off by the sun or the earth .
17 Constant friction between the two nations at sea led , on 23 October 1739 , to the British government declaring war on Spain , the resulting conflict being known as ‘ The War of Jenkins 's ear ’ ; Robert Jenkins was the master of a British ship who had had his ear cut off by a Spanish officer during a search .
18 Hitch shot him in the face , watching as he toppled backwards , most of his bottom jaw blown off by the close-range blast .
19 The smell , coming from the rear of a building , might easily have been the unpleasant odour given off by a dustbin in need of emptying .
20 The years of abundance in America began in 1950 with the defence expenditure triggered off by the Korean War , and the boom continued with only a hiccup or two of recession in 1954 and 1958 .
21 Wide-eyed , Robbie backed away , but found her retreat cut off by the worktop .
22 Left : Ladies winner Fabiola Rueda has her Legionnaire-style cap blown off by the wind
23 Which of us on finding our car aerial snapped off by a vandal have not momentarily wanted to do the same to his neck ?
24 Stage 4 is the familiar multiplier , only this time triggered off by a change in imports and exports .
25 This was condemned in western countries , but feeling against jews was common everywhere : Freud 's father had his hat knocked off by a Gentile who shouted at him ‘ Jew , get off the pavement ’ , and Jewish shops were smashed by miners in Tredegar in 1911 .
26 Years later , he came home with his right arm blown off by a shell , and ragged lungs after a poison-gas attack : he would never work on the docks again .
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