Example sentences of "[to-vb] from [det] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Now to extrapolate from this example to a general argument that familiarity of a subject is a disadvantage would clearly be absurd .
2 A child who has problems in any area of development may be regarded as being likely to benefit from some form of special educational placement , either full time or part time .
3 However , if the repurchase price contained in the options is the market value at the date of exercise , it is probable that the buyer acquires both the opportunity to benefit from any increase in the value of the asset and the risk of loss due to an adverse change in its value .
4 For the investor to benefit from any increase in the value of a company it is essential for a market to exist for the shares .
5 This combination of lower costs and increased market share makes the business well placed to benefit from any improvement in trading conditions .
6 ‘ So far we have identified almost 50 separate groups who work closely enough together to benefit from this type of training , ’ said E.S .
7 To leap from this standpoint to the assumption that we have an everlasting soul is to leap a very long way — probably too far .
8 And buy a sheep and come home with it and that over the bridge with it , all along and along er that road there and th and when we used to come from that school in , he used to be coming with a sheep on the string like this and the poor thing , I used to look at the old sheep and he often used to be tired you see .
9 It seemed to come from another world of reference , an older , ordinary world , of platitude and cliché , of pattern and familiar family ties , a world that she had thought they had never entered , for many good reasons never entered : and now here was Charles himself , invoking its terms , as though it had been there always , as though they had always inhabited its domain .
10 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 .
11 Nor do I feel compelled to depart from that conclusion by the fact that , under the present practice , a local authority which acts as a relator in a relator action is required to give an undertaking in damages even though it is so proceeding in order to enforce the law in the public interest .
12 In 1979 a French guidebook described Great Britain as ‘ the only place in the world which allows you to depart from this planet without really leaving it . ’
13 Since the same policy is now given statutory expression in section 34 of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 , which will come into force on 1 October 1992 , he will presumably not seek to depart from this policy in the meantime .
14 It is possible to play from this mode through the PC speaker — a useful facility .
15 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 .
16 ‘ Picnic ’ : a word that she had had no occasion to use from that day to this .
17 Also between Hindscarth and Ronsingon , it is possible to descend from any point along this ridge to the Buttermere valley .
18 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 .
19 there is much to see from any window in England if only the viewer is prepared to try and understand it .
20 In that case a lease for a period of six months from 10 June 1920 was expressed to continue from half year to half year until determined .
21 Understandably , it has appealed to teachers reacting against older traditional methods , particularly if these divorced learning to read from any kind of true reading experience , or if they involved the use of books containing as many older schemes did — unnatural and stilted language which prevented children from using the linguistic knowledge they already had .
22 It bound the parties to observe neutrality in the event of war between one of them and a third state and to refrain from any kind of aggression against each other .
23 Cup revenge : Colchester 's Roy Flanagan fails to score from this ball in yesterday 's cup clash with Maldon but went on to score 77 in his side 's emphatic victory
24 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 .
25 Member states had the option to withdraw from this agreement with one year 's notice .
26 To this centre people would come from different parts to learn from each other about issues which affect them all in everyday life .
27 Staff have also been able to learn from each other through exposure to different philosophies of teaching and assessment in other disciplines .
28 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 .
29 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 ?
30 Librarians accustomed to the traditional catalogue may find it very difficult to change from that perspective to recognized new needs and opportunities facing users of online catalogues .
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