Example sentences of "[to-vb] from [art] [noun] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Members are encouraged to request from the information office a prepared guide to all the facilities available . |
2 | It is still open to the ECJ judges to differ from the Advocate General 's opinion and , according to consultants and actuaries Noble Lowndes , even when judgment is given it is unlikely to cover all the details so requiring national legislation or court action . |
3 | Politicians on both sides in Bharatpur agree that if she is chosen as the Janata Dal candidate , she is certain to benefit from a sympathy vote , particularly in the nearby town of Deeg , where the Rajah died close to the extravagant summer palace formerly used by the family during monsoon months . |
4 | In practice , more than this minimum is likely to be required for entry to the majority of the courses offered by the University , in order to ensure that those admitted to degree courses possess a sufficiently broad educational background and that they may reasonably be expected to benefit from a university education . |
5 | CHILDREN 'S wards in five North-East hospitals are to benefit from a charity night being held on Teesside next month . |
6 | It was argued , and firmly believed , that boys were ‘ really ’ intellectually more able than girls and therefore more likely to benefit from a grammar school education . |
7 | However 3,076 prisoners and 1,731 others on parole were expected to benefit from a pardon law , details of which were published on May 14 . |
8 | Actually , you need to be very much better than your opponent to benefit from a superiority decision ; a slight difference will not do . |
9 | The Manufacturing , Science and Finance union negotiated an agreement last year , for instance , that entitled part-time women working for Norwich Union to benefit from a mortgage subsidy scheme . |
10 | I 've recommended your diet to various patients as I do n't see how anyone can fail to benefit from a diet low in fat . |
11 | If a transfer is to benefit from the £250,000 threshold , the instrument must be executed before 20 August . |
12 | She said : ‘ There are already support groups in Barnard Castle and Shildon and I feel people should know that people of Richmondshire are able to benefit from the Darlington hospice . ’ |
13 | Other sectors to benefit from the market surge included the life insurers , where Prudential rose 11 to 219p and Legal & General added 14 to 339p before settling at 335p . |
14 | He became one of the first to benefit from the plastic surgery techniques pioneered by Sir Archibald |
15 | In many ways Scotland is in a strong position to benefit from the community care reforms . |
16 | Usually , you lose the widow 's pension at the time of a divorce , though you may be able to benefit from the lump sum payment on death . |
17 | In other cases , individual workers made their own judgements about whether a person was likely to benefit from the care programme approach . |
18 | The twin objectives of raising awareness of subject assessment and of providing opportunities for college staff to benefit from the SCOTVEC presence seem to have been achieved . |
19 | The move came after three councillors from Stanley had resigned in protest at the council 's reversal of a vote to exclude from a £500,000 soil improvement grant farms owned by the Falkland Islands Company , which dominated the economy . |
20 | Balcon could reasonably feel defensive about the sort of criticism of British cinema that began to appear from the Film Society milieu , particularly in the pages of Close Up , a journal founded in 1927 . |
21 | Their strongest challenge is likely to come from a Leander quad containing the Olympic gold medallist Steve Redgrave . |
22 | On Tue , 4 Jan 1994 , wrote : Worst joke to come from a scum supporter over the xmas hols . |
23 | It is believed to come from a fin whale . |
24 | The US contribution of $70 million is likely to come from a NASA programme to support international collaboration , and the overall cost to the European agency is estimated to be within the budget of £260 million . |
25 | That if this is going home then that sort of thing does n't need to come from a form tutor , other than a sa er a sort of generalised one as well , if you like . |
26 | Obviously , having two amps means you 'll hear yourself better on stage , but I would have thought that a performer would prefer actual monitoring or foldback to come from a PA source ( ie. what the audience is hearing ) rather than a backline source . |
27 | Changes in the aid given to poor petitioners in 1914 , together with the effects of World War I , produced an increase in the divorce rate after 1918 , but it was not until 1946 that legal aid became freely available and therefore not until 1951 that divorce petitions began to come from a cross section of the population . |
28 | For the first 10 years of the Government , the cry that used to come from the Dispatch Box was that the economy was in a mess because of strikes by workers . |
29 | The majority of funds tend to come from the banking sector , although commercial bills are also important . |
30 | Most meteorites are thought to come from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter . |