Example sentences of "[vb infin] from [art] [noun] ['s] " in BNC.

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1 So , if things go right , the men below should know from the dogs ' barking where the boar is coming out and be waiting with their guns to ambush it .
2 That way , you can profit from the company 's success !
3 Surrounded as he was by the glamour of the acting world , he could pick and choose from the world 's most beautiful women — women like Marianne , with her lush body and provocative , slanting green eyes .
4 The scholarships will be awarded to two London-based guitarists who will undoubtedly benefit from a year 's tuition at the school .
5 However , those who really need help , including all first-time buyers , will benefit from the Government 's give-away .
6 We are just as determined that people in Northern Ireland should benefit from the Government 's reforms , including fund-holding practices , and therefore they will be introduced at the earliest possible date .
7 Langbaurgh Tory candidate Michael Bates : Said 75,000 people on low pay in Teesside would benefit from the Chancellor 's announcement of 20p in the pound income tax for the first £2,000 of taxable earnings .
8 The rapid growth and increasing expense of medical research have led the Trust to review its sources of income and research will benefit from the Trust 's increased income after the sale .
9 However , these were generally riskier and since many savers lacked the necessary information and confidence to invest overseas , it seemed a natural role for investment trusts that they should provide an indirect route into overseas markets for small investors who would benefit from the trust 's professional management .
10 They also emphasise the fact that the so-called victim , or outsider , may actually benefit from the insider 's trades in the form of higher prices .
11 We believed this conference would benefit from the IFI 's explanation of the criteria by which those projects were chosen and those amounts allocated .
12 Executed in brush and brown ink over a charcoal underdrawing , the drawing may well date from the artist 's second trip to Italy in 1773–74 .
13 According to Longacre ( 1979 : 116 ) , the orthographic paragraph can result from a writer 's stylistic concerns , ‘ partially dictated by eye appeal ’ , or from printing conventions such as an indentation for each change of speaker .
14 The sterling crisis was a natural consequence of trying to maintain domestic demand without import controls ; the investors ' strike was due to unease about the social changes , including the effects of rapid inflation , which it was feared would result from the government 's restoration of full employment .
15 As you will see from the Who 's who page we have two vacant posts on the committee .
16 It should perhaps be added that the amended section 4 would not necessarily have caught the conduct in question , because of its definition in terms of violence which might follow from the defendant 's conduct .
17 There are marked fluctuations in the monthly totals for any one winter , which must partly stem from the species ' habit of frequently feeding outside the estuaries during the day , so that birds are missed by the counts .
18 Larvae can then move from the child 's intestinal tract into the tissues , this phase sometimes being described as visceral larval migrans .
19 This is accounted for by the rather different procedure adopted in child sexual abuse investigations when there is an urgent need to protect the suspected victim and her or his evidence from outside pressure which may well emanate from the victim 's family .
20 Advocates of the deal stressed the dire economic consequences which would arise from the plan 's rejection .
21 The presence of mains services and their location will generally arise from the solicitors ' enquiries and searches , but their significance on layout can be underestimated .
22 But the monthly means from November to February show comparatively little variation and indicate an average winter population in the two Harbours of around 1,200 birds ; at least some of the fluctuations in the winter counts must arise from the species ' regular habit of feeding outside the Harbours in flooded fields , when these are available .
23 3.11 When there is some particular feature in a case which aggravates the degree of suffering it need not arise from the plaintiff 's concern about himself .
24 But , if the wife has been in receipt of the advice of a stranger whom the creditor believes on reasonable grounds to be competent , independent and disinterested , then the circumstances would need to be very exceptional before the creditor could be held bound by any equity which otherwise might arise from the husband 's conduct and his wife 's actual failure to understand the transaction …
25 River ( 1964 ) affirms that if a response " is not reinforced by a satisfying or rewarding state of affairs , it will tend not to recur and so will gradually disappear from the individual 's repertoire by the process of extinction " .
26 Compared with the prolonged torment and mutilations of life on the ground , the knowledge that a pilot 's expectancy of survival was far poorer even than a machine-gunner 's could not detract from the infantryman 's envy ; even though death commonly meant being burned alive , at least it was quick , clean — and witnessed by thousands .
27 The sign , at the archway of the Kings Head Nursing Home , Market Place , does not detract from the arch 's architectural detailing and is not considered unduly prominent , the inspector has stated in a report .
28 His works travel the world , reproduced on postcards , posters and any medium which does not actually detract from the artist 's intention .
29 In fact , because it is not known , it might detract from the paper 's persuasiveness . ’
30 A seamen 's canteen licence only permits the sale of alcoholic liquor for consumption in the canteen , and it is an offence to supply in or take from a seamen 's canteen liquor for consumption off the premises ( see s.96 ) .
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