Example sentences of "[vb base] [adv] [verb] from [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Firstly , they tend not to originate from a real typographic font but are often variations on an original while , secondly , being bitmaps they can not be scaled . |
2 | Many partnerships , of course , are characterised by much more superficial , less close relationships between education and business where , crucially , activities remain largely separate from the mainstream activities of both and owned only by those individuals who are involved rather their organisations . |
3 | On a visit to Paris in 1792 , Losh narrowly escaped from the city during the September massacres , possibly owing his escape to the influence of Jean Paul Marat , who had practised as a veterinary surgeon in Newcastle . |
4 | Discussions of Woodville influence usually start from the premise that men with whom the family had dealings were ipso facto members of a Woodville affinity , an equation which puts the family at the head of a very impressive connection within the royal government . |
5 | Discussions of Woodville influence usually start from the premise that men with whom the family had dealings were ipso facto members of a Woodville affinity , an equation which puts the family at the head of a very impressive connection within the royal government . |
6 | The three soloists here all sound rather distanced from the music . |
7 | The sound that had made O look up came from a man who was sitting on the floor , leaning against the wall of the tunnel , looking not much like a beggar , but just someone worn out ; perhaps he had collapsed there and was resting . |
8 | Each Spring , as Cornwall prepares for its annual , generally welcome , English invasion , times seem far removed from the troubled Tudor days when hastily mustered Cornish armies invaded England in support of various causes , culminating in the Western Rebellion of 1549 , when a largely Cornish army besieged Exeter for five weeks . |
9 | WITH the latest appalling upsurge in violence , both loyalist and republican , thoughts of peace or even a breakthrough in the political stalemate seem far removed from the grim reality . |
10 | The postcrania are only known for ‘ Kenyapithecus ’ from Maboko Island , and they indicate little change from the generalized arboreal quadrupedalism present in the early Miocene hominoids like Proconsul . |
11 | But Smith admitted : ‘ We 've got three points out of four , and that 's what we set out to achieve from the first two games . |
12 | Caton repeated some earlier experiments on the electro-physiology of nerve and muscle preparations , and then set about recording from the exposed surface of the brain . |
13 | These are largely women and lower socio-economic groups who feel most excluded from the system . |
14 | Their requirements for food , fuel and fodder were not adequately considered , he argues , with the result that many now feel wholly alienated from the Project 's aims . |
15 | The solutions they proffer only come from the limited range of their own experience . |
16 | To show that we do live distinctive lives , and that we try sincerely , however imperfectly , but try sincerely to refrain from the seamier side of life , and to concentrate on everything that 's wholesome . |
17 | It would be unfair to say that I have formed a low view of the Foreign Office ; rather I have formed the view that Foreign Office activities have in some way become totally disconnected from the human race . |
18 | Suppose that while shopping in a crowded store I become temporarily separated from a friend and in reply to his anxious call shout back " I am here " . |
19 | Many … become secondarily depressed from the feeling of being hopelessly trapped . ’ |
20 | I hate to say this but I do rather think from the bruising that someone did it to him . ’ |
21 | The merits of the plaintiff 's objections to the means of valuation do not appear from the report , and did not need to , because this was a striking-out application under RSC Ord 18 , r19 , which allows no evidence to be heard about the case that the plaintiff wished to make . |
22 | The question was asked in relation to training : can people compete equally if they do not start from the same vantage point ? |
23 | That men in particular do not benefit from the procedures was suggested by the fact that twice as many women as men filed for divorce . |
24 | The prices of alarms , as well , you 'd be quite surprised they do not range from a thousand . |
25 | It can not be emphasised too strongly that our unemployment problems do not stem from the installation of such equipment . |
26 | We do not shrink from the real choices for our country . |
27 | It is worth recognising the key terms in general use , so that these do not divert from an understanding of the major issues . |
28 | They do not arise from the continuous political efforts of managers who , hoping they will have a short tenure of office , try to make their mark by some evident organizational change . |
29 | He wants no reform , for the end of his abominable book is to show that the sufferings of the people do not arise from the want of reform ; but from the ’ indiscreet breeding of women ’ . ’ |
30 | There was a conspiracy among Labour Members to put on the record points that do not arise from the report . |