Example sentences of "[noun sg] [adv] [v-ing] from the " in BNC.

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1 Damages are assessed on the basis of the damage naturally arising from the breach and in the contemplation of the parties .
2 Any loss naturally arising from the breach ;
3 The future Quaker abolitionist , James Cropper of Liverpool , accepted the necessity ‘ for a humble , dependent state of mind naturally arising from the knowledge of the superior wisdom and goodness of the will and ways of God to our own ’ and found gloom about the future banished .
4 In all living cells , proteins have to recognize and bind to specific DNA sequences , recognition generally resulting from the interactions of particular amino acid side-chains with the nucleotide bases of specific DNA sequences .
5 The news has shocked a fashion industry already reeling from the recession .
6 Dugal Nisbet-Smith , director of the Newspaper Society , an organisation representing mainly English and Welsh provincial titles , has said 17.5 per cent VAT would be a catastrophe for an industry already reeling from the recession .
7 Tacitus tells us that this incursion was into the territory of Rome 's allies , and this could place it in the lower Severn , where Caratacus could have linked up with the other group of dissidents in the south-west still smarting from the operations of Vespasian , who with his sea-borne mobility swept right along the south coast , taking the Britons by surprise .
8 At the foot of the pole the succulent body of the deer lay sprawled , blood still seeping from the severed arteries of its neck .
9 Whitlock smiled politely , his mind still reeling from the way she had dissected his cover story , piece by piece , until there was nothing left for him to hide behind .
10 It is a small Stately Home mostly dating from the eighteenth century , but bits of it go back to Elizabethan times .
11 From that point they were to make over a hundred films together , some thirty of them silent ones , and with their best work probably deriving from the phase 1929–35 , when they were engaged in creating coherent and sparse twenty-minute cameos .
12 In the current political climate , with the state sector steadily withdrawing from the provision of public services and the private sector providing alternatives only where there is a possibility of profit , the third sector of the economy , that of charitable organisations , becomes increasingly important .
13 Berdichev shivered but stood straighter , his skin still tingling from the shower .
14 ‘ Even when there is not an immediate project in view , we have regular regional meetings with the district and county councils , with a lot of initiative also coming from the Welsh Office and the Development Boards for Rural Wales , ’ says Mark Causebrook , director for Regional Railways ( Central Area ) .
15 He frowned as he stared at the brown water still gushing from the tap .
16 This argument has its attractions , and I note by way of analogy with the statutory authority cases that it is only a nuisance inevitably resulting from the authorised works on which immunity is conferred .
17 Three samples of pellets were examined , from Scotland , Wales and Ireland , the Welsh sample again coming from the Rhulen valleys where the other predator samples came from ( Table 2.4 and Appendix ) .
18 A public fuss about sovereignty , the government reckons , might inflame feelings even more and touch off really ugly incidents , maybe bloodshed , in an area already smarting from the harsher side of unity , collapsing firms and soaring unemployment .
19 Behind their perimeter walls lie freshly laundered flowers , verdant grass still sparkling from the last shower , yew hedges in an ecstasy of precision clipping .
20 He sat forward and placed his hand on the pad , his palm still tingling from the effects of the shock .
21 The price alterations are a study in themselves , an example being the First Return from Craven Arms to Eaton , the original fare perhaps dating from the last century , crossed out and altered by some unfortunate clerk , by gas light , with a fine nib pen and a bottle of railway ink. , round about 1915 .
22 We ourselves are all fully committed to the idea that the effective communication of information from our resources to each other and to our user community is a fundamental objective directly flowing from the obligations laid on us by statute .
23 Radio Caroline was back on air yesterday broadcasting from the Ross Revenge in Dover harbour after winning a four-week community radio licence .
24 The first consisted of " expenditure necessarily resulting from the Treaty " and related mainly to agricultural expenditure and expenditure upon third countries , while the latter type of expenditure covered principally the structural funds .
25 The reasons are the same ; the valleyside torrents are checked when they reach the main valley floor and aggradation takes place , the fan shape usually resulting from the stream shifting its course from time to time .
26 Obviously caused by a simple technical fault , this spiriting away of his death gave him a singular nobility totally lacking from the rest of the film .
27 The book first appeared in 1953 and was produced under the difficult conditions of a country still emerging from the ruins of World War II .
28 But the company now operating from the Gloucester HQ of parent company Babcock Electrical Projects Ltd said in a statement : ‘ These accusations are completely refuted and any acts of impropriety are vigorously denied . ’
29 The one terrible thing I witnessed as a small child was my mother suddenly rising from the dining-table with face tortured and crying , ‘ I am going to die ’ .
30 Jack stayed where he was , his face still smarting from the punch .
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