Example sentences of "[adv] from [art] [num ord] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Women are so utterly used to working with their own bodies : we are trained to do so from the first time we wear pink-for-a-girl , and a concentration upon the significations of our physicality is encouraged to a far greater extent than is the case with boys and men . |
2 | MicroMuse believes that Sun NetManager is the best tool for the job ( although an SQL link for the software is currently available only from a third party ) . |
3 | Individual property owners in cities have long had to conform to legal controls , but planning as a more widespread activity dates only from the mid-twentieth century ( Hall 1982 ) . |
4 | Mass movement of women into the work-force dates only from the Second World War — especially from 1960 — and the improvement of women 's wage rates relative to men 's happened only since 1970 . |
5 | State intervention in rural manufacturing really dates only from the Second World War , after the report of the Scott Committee in 1942 assessed the advantages and disadvantages that would result from rural industrialization . |
6 | Her warlike appearance dates only from the next century and is very much a creation of the Restoration court , where she was developed as a symbol of the victory of the British in the Dutch Wars . |
7 | It is only from the eighteenth century that ‘ bourgeois art ’ sets itself up as a realm separate from the social with its own specific ‘ institutional ’ apparatus of production , distribution , and reception of aesthetic forms . |
8 | The first dated coin was issued by Valdemar II of Denmark in 1234 , but this is an isolated and untypical example , and dates became a frequent part of the design only from the sixteenth century . |
9 | Many documents , especially from the nineteenth century , contain redundant words which only serve to confuse . |
10 | Here there were probably more pastors than scholars , especially from the third world , but there was a significant number of biblical scholars and theologians who looked back on decades in which loyal Catholic scholars had been harassed and impeded by an obsessive witch hunt against Modernism . |
11 | The controversy concerning the bilateral relationship between Britain and the USA was a symptom of this wider problem , which came to involve competition from new airlines — especially from the third world and developing countries , rising fuel prices , and deregulation policies . |
12 | The Commission could have put forward the first of these amendments separately from the Fifth Directive , and may have chosen its course in order to revive consideration of the Fifth Directive as a whole . |
13 | The movement from the initial grandly imperative wish for a creative act , reviving an older myth , to the final mundane narrative of the beginning of another , much less magnificent revival of potential creativity promised by ‘ sal volatile/ And a glass of brandy neat ’ is a movement away from a first situation ( that of Ariadne on Naxos ) which we never see in itself ; the painting conjured up and the other parallels to this first situation are interpretations not just of each other , but also of that first situation which , because a ‘ myth ’ and so subject to constant reinterpretation , may never have happened in any of the ways presented , if indeed it ever took place at all . |
14 | Let us put now a sheet of opposite charge a distance d away from the first sheet ( fig. 2.14 ) . |
15 | Today 's bright and open classrooms with their informal furniture seem light years away from the first school in which I taught . |
16 | Hankin rates the Bishop Auckland youngster but feels he will benefit from a spell away from the first team . |
17 | There is decreased ability to stay away from the first use in any day of the substance or process of addiction . |
18 | Hauser has been told he can negotiate his own move away from the second division club . |
19 | Then she leaped away from the second rat , just in time . |
20 | Sometimes you 're a week away from the last performance you gave and then find yourself out there — so that the voice and understanding of the part does need constant refreshing . |
21 | I should say that I , I came away from the last meeting with an enormous list of things to do , and I have n't managed to do them all , but they 'll emerge as we go through , erm , developments Perth , Perth if inter interrupt me |
22 | This would certainly simplify equation ( 6.3 ) to yield : but it is clear intuitively that we can not completely fill the file , as the last available storage position would on average be half the file area away from the last record 's computed address . |
23 | The girl 's slim figure , small breasts , and pony tail haircut are those of an adolescent , while her pose , one foot at right angles to the other , is just a little away from the third position in classical Western ballet . |
24 | He was four or five lengths away from the next plane when one by one they angled into the quilted greyness . |
25 | You can almost tell just from the first time they 're doing their marking . |
26 | Although this is an old site , the present three-storey building appears to date largely from the 19th century . |
27 | It dates largely from the 18th century and straddles the Ampney Brook , which powers the internal wheel . |
28 | The machinery was of mainly wooden construction and dated largely from the 18th century . |
29 | It was a perfect site because the building , for which a quarter of a million pounds ( £8,250,000 ) had been set aside from the Twentieth Century Fund , was meant to be ‘ a challenge to the Church of England ’ . |
30 | The name is believed to be derived from a personal name Sighel or Signup , and the second part from the thorn bushes which grew in abundance at the time , and dates possibly from the 7th century . |