Example sentences of "[to-vb] from this [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 ‘ So far we have identified almost 50 separate groups who work closely enough together to benefit from this type of training , ’ said E.S .
2 Those who are interested in doubt only from a practical standpoint may want to pass from this definition of doubt as doublemindedness directly to an examination of the categories of doubt in part two .
3 She had not known what to expect from this side of marriage since there was no literature available to her on the subject and her mother had told her nothing .
4 The major feature of hypertext , non-linearity , helps to resolve this conflict by providing a means of defining a core curriculum , at some level , and enabling various structures to emerge from this base of information .
5 There it 's got barbed wire around it it 's made of wood and it 's long where are they talking about what are they talking about somewhere around Nottinghamshire Nottingham three four three four three four to call from this lot of clues , It 's got barbed wire around it it 's made of wood it 's long .
6 Organizations that seek innovation ought to learn from this kind of experience : allow people to move outside of the orthodoxy of an area , to mix and match , to shake up assumptions .
7 Apart from the fairly depressing conclusion that it is very difficult to study neural mechanisms of behaviour , what else is there to learn from this summary of methodology ?
8 The major point which I want to take from this discussion of young people 's situation is that their need to be supported economically by their parents , and more generally their position in structures of reciprocal support within families , to a large extent depend upon factors outside the control of individual families : laws relating to schooling and employment , and the operation of the labour market .
9 Now it seems to me that the Churches have a great deal to gain from this method of selling their message .
10 Further , Hayek argues that constructivist rationalists are guilty of ‘ the synoptic delusion ’ ; that is , the belief that all relevant social facts are capable of being known to some one mind , and that it is possible to construct from this knowledge of the particulars a desirable social order .
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