Example sentences of "[vb pp] from [art] [noun sg] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Some of West Ham 's most violent supporters have come from the satellite estates of north London or new towns like Harlow or Thamesmead .
2 That no similar slogan has come from the car workers is important , and is tied up with the fact that ‘ the car plants for the car workers ’ makes no sense to the lads who work on the line .
3 Many new ideas have come from the Marketing Departments of all Banks in recent years .
4 and support has come from the hospital doctors ' and NHS consultants ' associations .
5 Cloves , harvested from the flower buds of the clove tree are an essential flavouring along with cinnamon , star anise and ginger ; dried chillies add a peppery touch .
6 McCool was omitted from the afternoon singles along with National champion Eavan Higgins so that Hazel Kavanagh of Grange could be given her first match in the tournament and Barbara Hackett from Castletroy her second outing .
7 PCR products were not detected if RNA or reverse transcriptase was omitted from the reaction tubes .
8 Being situated on the opposite side of the Fleet , it was approached from the College buildings by a strongly-built Rustic-bridge which spanned the river just in front of the Forge at the north end of the Ride …
9 Beyond stood a rectangular building , the terminal , fabricated from the packing crates left over by the American military from its construction work on the runway .
10 Hordes of children scramble every day in the gutters for food discarded from the street stalls " .
11 The terminal 's crude oil loading meters ( COLMS ) — which measure the amount of oil discharged from the storage tanks via the jetty loading arms onto tankers — are being renewed .
12 Much will depend on the speed with which the practical aspects can be carried through and the extent to which new members can be attracted from the building societies .
13 As expected from the case studies in Oxfordshire schools ( Open University , 1982a ; West , Chapter 3 in this volume ) , the most popular strategies were ‘ staff collaboration and discussion ’ and ‘ individual reflection or introspection ’ .
14 This was not expected from the case studies , in which the ‘ pink booklet ’ was seen to play no part whatsoever .
15 The mean age of patients in the colorectal cancer and benign colorectal tumour groups was higher than that of the inflammatory bowel and normal rectal mucosa groups , as would be expected from the age distributions of surgery for these different pathologies .
16 A stock index represents the market 's estimate of the present value of the subsequent cash flows expected from the constituent companies , while the current price of a futures contract on an index for delivery at time T represents the market 's estimate of the present value at time T of the subsequent cash flows .
17 The first were carried from the Maldive fisheries by Arab traders and reached West Africa by way of the Red Sea or Zanzibar , crossing the continent overland .
18 Now painted in North Staffordshire Indiana livery it was rescued from the scrap merchants torch on the closure of Sierra Leone Railway and returned back to England together with four of the West African coaches in 1975 .
19 This prototype — 226 now 700 — differed from the production models in having lower sides and being slightly shorter in length .
20 In the early days , both in the United States and in Africa , some even hunted from the railway carriages themselves , but very soon the game was being driven further and further from the railway lines .
21 Names were selected from the practice records on an alphabetical basis ( see Appendix I ) , which , although not strictly speaking a ‘ random ’ method , is not obviously biased in any particular direction .
22 Christine has transferred from the Testing Services Section and Lesley from the Product Development Department .
23 But it is possible that so much competence could be transferred from the member states to the Community that member states would lose their status as sovereign states ’ .
24 Under the plan some 50 missiles would be transferred from the launch silos in Wyoming ( the seventh designated MX location ) to 25 new trains , which would be kept at the seven bases for deployment on the public rail system in time of crisis .
25 An extra £3,500 had to be transferred from the leisure services central budget because there was not enough to produce publicity leaflets and posters .
26 Yet if football was the only factor the prospect would be a fascinating one — the 1988 show transferred from the summer thunderstorms of West Germany to the clinging heat of Palermo and Cagliari , in which the Egyptians will be the only players who feel at home .
27 Responsibility for the education of severely mentally handicapped children was transferred from the health authorities to the local education authorities under this Act .
28 The fields near the margins of the swamp area were probably kept drained by the building of a network of canals : those towards the centre may have been built up above flood level with muck transferred from the canal bottoms .
29 That fact , and the fact of being in the island , separated from the land wars which every other country in Europe has had to cope with , have produced in the British by now a different state of mind about politics , about the state , about the military , and about foreigners .
30 This chapter includes an examination of the concept of race and uses several frameworks to demonstrate how racial identity confusion in black children is rooted in the family and society , and therefore can not be separated from the power relationships within society in general and social work agencies in particular .
  Next page