Example sentences of "[adv] from the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The other phosphorylated region of c-Jun lies just upstream from the C-terminal bZIP domain that specifies dimerisation and DNA-binding . |
2 | ‘ You can see better from the lower door , ’ I remarked , turning to go down the path . |
3 | It is derived entirely from the general meaning of car , together with the semantic properties of the context ( remember that general knowledge concerning cars and operations carried out on them is , on the view of meaning adopted in this book , embedded in the meanings of car , wash , polish , etc . ) . |
4 | For these — unlike Superfund sites — the cash comes entirely from the federal government . |
5 | Levi withdrew entirely from the Israeli delegation . |
6 | That demand did not , of course , come entirely from the domestic market . |
7 | The interest which the RUC has as a police force derives entirely from the social context in which it operates , but this context is both a spur and a hindrance to research on the RUC . |
8 | This is assessed entirely from the objective assessment derived from inspection reports or bacteriological data . |
9 | and then suddenly from the other end there 's this like , cos we , it 's like a big room , it 's the other end of the room all the dealers there , and er anyway and er and suddenly I hear , and then someone 's like saying talking , they 're all , somebody 's like mi microphone and starts talking to them about er what 's happening in the market , things like that blah blah blah blah blah , and this means blah blah blah blah so watch out for blah blah blah and I thought it 's like living in a different world , it 's amazing . |
10 | Slater called suddenly from the other side of the road . |
11 | Severed human limbs , heads and trunks lay scattered over a wide area ; other human remains , accompanied by tattered shreds of uniform , hung grotesquely from the remaining tree branches . |
12 | Two dusty fans , which I suspected had not moved since the French walked out in 1962 , hung idly from the high ceiling . |
13 | They were awarded damages for this loss of ordinary business which arose naturally from the late delivery . |
14 | It follows naturally from the previous chapter that we should now go on to consider where sedimentation is actually taking place today . |
15 | Apparently from the centuries-old custom of throwing salt over one 's left shoulder in order to avert bad luck . ’ |
16 | In this process in which the psychiatrist ( or psychoanalyst ) looks outwards from the individual psyche into his patient 's social network , he inevitably moves into territory which the social anthropologist ( and in Europe the sociologist ) regards as his — hence , of course , the boundary disputes alluded to above . |
17 | One of the planes , an enemy one she thought , suddenly blazed with a great yellow and red light from somewhere just behind its wings , and almost immediately , tiny bright fragments hurtled outwards from the burning plane , and it was gone . |
18 | Since this strategy works outwards from the highest scoring words , it is possible to show ( see Woods 1982 ) that islands always incorporate words which have a density score no greater than the words already in the island . |
19 | The initial depression will be the first to accumulate sediment and this will lead to a positive feedback cycle of further subsidence and sediment accumulation extending outwards from the initial focus of subsidence . |
20 | Jagged slivers of wood pointed outwards from the heavy brass plate at the top like a crown of thorns . |
21 | Foundries and mines , factories and tenements were spreading outwards from the old heart of the town , and an ever-present pall of smoke and soot hung in the air over the river . |
22 | Shortly after leaving Folkestone we were preparing to enter Ramsgate harbour on a cold , blustery day which prompted me to go below for my duffel coat as I normally conned Venturous alongside from the open bridge . |
23 | The les fortunate guests had to come daily from the new hotel on Persepolis or even form Shiraz , forty miles away . |
24 | Three hundred tons of fish arrived daily from the western fishing ports . |
25 | But the myriad electronic images and printed words that pour in daily from the Balkan war zone can not convey the whole truth about what is going on there . |
26 | Computerised sickness absence records to the end of March 1988 were obtained annually from the civil service pay centres . |
27 | Until 1991 Vietnam had received an estimated US$1,000 million annually from the Soviet Union in credits and grants . |
28 | Certain objects admit of both verbs however and the contrast in meaning is highly revealing , as the pair of examples below from the Brown University Corpus shows : ( 136 ) … such comments as the following which was made by one of the Kohnstamm-negative subjects … |
29 | The article below from The Daily Telegraph is just one example of press coverage received . |
30 | The fire had been lit in the bedroom , and Senga was sitting curled up in the rocking chair beside the fire quietly reading aloud from the latest issue of the " Girls Own Paper . " |