Example sentences of "[noun prp] from [art] [num ord] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The two chief rivals for Dalmatia from the ninth century to the twelfth were the Croats and the Venetians .
2 The aim of the project is to study the issue of civil rights and individual liberties in Russia from the mid-nineteenth century to 1917 .
3 Where further notification is not given on the fourth day in accordance with the procedures laid down for the second stage , you shall not be disentitled to SSP from the fourth day of absence for that reason only .
4 The early Christian influence came from England from the tenth century onwards and its principal centre was at Uppsala .
5 Studies of household listings reveal comparatively few three-generational homes in England from the sixteenth century onwards : a mere 5 per cent on average .
6 The statue is known to have been in Florence from the sixteenth century onwards and is documented as being in the Uffizi from 1676 , but was always thought to have been a copy of a Greek original .
7 chart the migration history from the Indian subcontinent to Scotland from the nineteenth century to the present day ;
8 The scenes between Hilarion , Giselle , Albrecht and Bathilde are reminiscent of the scenes that develop Tybalt 's hatred of Romeo from the first fight between Montague and Capulet to his discovery of Romeo with Juliet after their first meeting at the ball , and finally to the fight that ends in Tybalt 's death .
9 Now Matthew from the First Diploma course reports back on the progress of another project .
10 Jasper ware has been made continuously by Wedgwood from the 18th century to the present day .
11 Merrill was drying her hair on Saturday afternoon when Diane from the next flat knocked at the door and held out a letter addressed to Merrill , explaining that it had been included with her junk mail which she had ignored until a moment ago .
12 As Eisenman demonstrates , the legitimacy of the high priesthood — of Zadok or of the Zadok — was resuscitated by the Maccabeans , the last dynasty of Judiac kings , who ruled Israel from the second century B.C. until Herodian times and the Roman occupation .
13 In 1280 , for example , ‘ the metes and bounds of the New Forest from the first time that it was afforested ’ were said to extend from the Test westwards to the Avon , and from the Solent northwards to the Wiltshire county boundary .
14 In the courtyard is a wooden statue of Hercules from the second quarter of the 18C , attributed to L. Widmann .
15 Snow from the last fall .
16 The CDU proposed the addition of a clause to the Basic Law ( constitution ) which would allow the authorities to reject applicants for political asylum entering Germany from a third country in which they were not at risk of political persecution .
17 As a result , metal-working ( which was hardly developed at all in North American native cultures ) was widespread in Siberia from the second millennium BC , and long before the seventeenth century AD all its indigenous peoples either worked iron themselves or used artefacts made of the precious metal when these could be obtained by trade .
18 The secco recitative section for the Spirits of Mercy , Justice and Christ from the second aria of the work .
19 Germany 's captain Nikki Pilic , who had barely put the debacle surrounding Germany 's Olympic nominations behind him , came in for criticism for not resting Becker from the second day 's doubles , especially after he had been forced to play himself into the ground to beat Luis Mattar over five sets in exhausting heat on the first day .
20 Top : Panch Plkhari from the first rock peak .
21 ‘ The studio portraiture movement , flourishing in Britain from the second half of the 19th century until early 1960s , channelled many women into photography as a professional occupation … ’ says Val Williams .
22 Figure 3.12 The spread of the habit , in tits , of opening milk bottle tops in Britain from the first record in 1921 near Southampton until 1947 .
23 Or can a more positive interpretation be sustained , with France emerging as a close rival to Britain from the eighteenth century onwards ?
24 Mr Dent from the third floor , who was waiting by the lift doors , looked at him narrowly .
25 At this village north of St Austell is the Wheal Martyn China Clay Works , now preserved as an open-air museum of the industry that brought prosperity to this part of Cornwall from the mid-eighteenth century , when William Cookworthy , a Plymouth Quaker and apothecary , discovered kaolin , the chief ingredient of porcelain , which had been a secret closely guarded by the Chinese for over a thousand years .
26 Milton adopts a classical tragic high style and models Samson to participate in Renaissance humanist parodia Christiana , the transference of Classical literary principles to Christian settings , a methodology common throughout Europe from the fifteenth century onwards especially among neo-Latin writing .
27 In Europe from the twelfth century onward , feudal society was affected by the gradual transformation of local markets into permanent towns , with important implications for the emergence of a fourth stratum .
28 Modern scholarship is beginning to bring to attention traditions of piety , particularly that of women , in Europe from the twelfth century onwards , which are significant for the understanding of medieval English mysticism .
29 Why Michael Atherton was not immediately drafted in when the experience of Gooch was lost before the start , with Stewart being told to keep wicket as originally planned , remains one of the mysteries of the tour — and as crass a selection error as leaving out Phil Tufnell from the first Test at Calcutta .
30 England have been shown up for the lack of quality in their line-up , although Gooch 's illness here , Michael Atherton 's illness in Calcutta and the stupidity of leaving out Phil Tufnell from the first Test and Atherton on the second Test all contributed to an unexpectedly one-sided contest .
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