Example sentences of "[vb -s] from the [noun] [unc] " in BNC.

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1 An example is the 17 ½ km ley that runs to the Nunwick and Thornborough henges from the Devil 's Arrows group of standing stones near Boroughbridge in Yorkshire ( Figure 2 ) .
2 Brig Ramsey arrives from the Women 's Royal Army Corps ( WRAC ) , where she was the final director before its abolition last week under Options for Change .
3 The chaos then results from the compilers ' eagerness to compress his discussion of several variants into one example burdened with exceptions and qualifications .
4 Participation in the affairs of State and open discussions of political matters must now be tempered by the need for survival between the testing conditions of competition abroad and what results from the State 's reactions to these conditions , the resentments of the population at home .
5 But it is not justifiable to conclude from this that criminal law reflects a value-consensus or even results from the state 's neutral refereeing among competing interest groups .
6 Naturally , the carrier can not be held responsible for loss or damage which results from the trader 's carelessness or negligence .
7 As the temperature rises in the museum under the hot sun moisture evaporates from the ship 's wooden hull .
8 The user also benefits from the system 's adaptability , which allows ad hoc reports to be produced quickly .
9 He points out that Clwyd benefits from the EC 's regional policy to the tune of about £10m a year .
10 As a Harijan he benefits from the Government 's reservation scheme for these ‘ backward classes ’ and is thus assured of his job : there were only 40 eligible candidates from his category for 100 posts , whereas there were 5,000 higher-caste Hindus contesting the remaining 80 posts .
11 This warns that one of the leads to the keyboard must be twisted , and the user should beware of long component leads from the Spectrum 's PCB shorting out on the metal base .
12 Other interesting features of the show include tasty recipes from British Meat and displays of quality cuts from the butcher 's shop , microwaves demonstrations plus cake icing ideas from Tate & Lyle , and cooking and carving hints from New Zealand Lamb .
13 Working initially in pairs and then in groups , pursue the question : " What would you like to do a drama about ? " , seeking to find a dramatic starting point which stems from the interviewees ' interests .
14 Once , my hon. Friend identifies a vital point about public confidence in our national health service , which stems from the Government 's investment in and support for it .
15 The search for practical results as well as for good science stems from the administration 's desire to use technology to revive the US economy as well as from the fact that the initiatives have grown large enough to attract the attention of Congress .
16 Basically it was receiving telephone calls from the public erm and using that information to put on a computer to send officers to incidents various incidents .
17 Poverty compelled a return to advertising in the early 1940s but the work of this period is essentially derivative in that it borrows from the artist 's own paintings .
18 The one is in the corridor that goes from the porter 's lodge to the stairs up to .
19 Perhaps , instead , they get their reference points from the earth 's magnetic field , just as pigeons do .
20 Whether or not it is correct , it quite clearly differs from the parents ' explicit account of their perception of how the decision has been reached and the implications it will have for George .
21 In addition to these requirements a responsible person may be required to keep the supervisor informed of his address if it differs from the child 's ( para 3(3) ) .
22 For Lacan notes how it is only when the infant encounters itself in a ‘ mirroring ’ image that a form is set up for the face and body ; the mirror provides a perceptual gestalt ‘ ideal ’ form , which does not reflect a reality since it differs from the subject 's fragmentary experience .
23 She starts out smug , married and cerebral ; but hearing , via an air vent , snippets from the psychotherapist 's next door , begins her own self-analysis .
24 Constructionist theory also asserts that the existence of the ‘ self ’ is demonstrated through discursive actions : performing competently certain types of speech acts , such as making statements in which the speaker reports on how the world appears from the speaker 's viewpoint ( declarations ) , or where the speaker describes him/herself or others in a ‘ storyline ’ ( narrations ) .
25 There is , however , another dimension to the debate , and this appears from the CLRC 's view that , where reckless driving causes death , this should not affect the label of the offence but may be treated as an aggravating factor in sentencing in appropriate cases .
26 It also appears from the court 's case law ( see , for example , Stanton v. Institute National d'Assurances Sociales pour Travailleurs Indépendants ( Inasti ) ( Case 143/87 ) [ 1988 ] E.C.R. 3877 , 3912 , para. 10 ) that article 52 , as a directly applicable rule of Community law , is binding on the member states even though , in the absence of Community legislation , they retain legislative jurisdiction in the particular field .
27 What practical steps are we taking to discover how the Church appears from the outsider 's perspective and how its message is being interpreted ; remembering it 's not what we say but what they hear which really counts ?
28 A touring computer exhibition distracts from the site 's desperate underfunding
29 The X-ray flux is so great when it emerges from the machine 's vacuum that it causes the air to fluoresce and , if focused , it can burn holes in paper rather like a powerful laser beam .
30 That of women 's or gender consciousness emerges from the women 's movement when consciousness-raising helped to make women aware of their specific position and disadvantages within contemporary society .
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