Example sentences of "[Wh det] [verb] from the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I think if you have mainly pain in there it 's much more likely to be a little bit of inflammation under the this tendon which goes from the muscle here over the top of the kneecap and attaches in there .
2 In addition , no study of this kind has been conducted in Northern Ireland which differs from the rest of the United Kingdom in a number of pertinent respects .
3 From Figure 8.1 it can be seen that , for all tests with symmetrical distributions of scores ( known technically , and rather confusingly , as ‘ normal distributions ’ ) , any score which differs from the mean by two or more standard deviations will be unusual and therefore worthy of further consideration .
4 The CSO , which passed from the control of the Cabinet Office to the Treasury earlier this year , prepares the National Accounts and many other economic statistics .
5 If subjectivity is less fixed , then space is left for the construction of identities , and collective identities , which deviate from the norm ( Lury 1987 ) .
6 The cheers spread to the people who crammed every street which led from the concourse , but Artai did not turn his head or acknowledge them .
7 The logical alternative was to promote the " ministerial " principle by strengthening the chain of command which led from the Ministry of Internal Affairs to the provincial governors .
8 He moved into the little kitchen which led from the sitting-room and soon Nelly could hear the tap running .
9 As she mounted the ladder which led from the kitchen into what was still called ‘ the lads ’ room' , she smiled at her awkwardness .
10 They had seen little of the house apart from a gloomy garden and a long corridor which led from the entrance hall to the room in which they had been received .
11 When they could hold it no longer the Collector shouted the order to retire to the next door : that which led from the drawing-room to the hall and where , several weeks earlier , the Collector had been lurking as he tried to make up his mind to attend the meeting of the Krishnapur Poetry Society .
12 Erm als other problems which arose from the outline land law was in its deliberate ambiguity er in its deliberate erm tt sort of ambiguity because it left reg it left the law to be interpreted by regional areas which meant that how that erm in some places they totally misinterpreted the law but the Communist Party had to have this flexibility because China was such a vast country and you could n't just impose one policy per se across the country .
13 In any event , residence of some kind was the hallmark of establishment in so far as establishment involved economic integration in the host member state of a kind that was greater than that which arose from the provision of a cross-border service .
14 That will have a disastrous effect upon the locality equal to that which arose from the threat of the route .
15 The problem of incorporation of standard terms and conditions has been dealt with in a series of cases generally known as the " ticket cases " , which arose from the practice of printing terms and conditions on a variety of documents from railway or steamship tickets , to deck chair or swimming pool tickets , which were intended to govern the contract between the proprietor and the person using his services ( see for instance Parker v South Eastern Railway ( 1877 ) 2 CPD 416 , Hood v Anchor Line ( Henderson Brothers ) Ltd [ 1918 ] AC 837 , Chapelton v Barry UDC [ 1940 ] 1 KB 532 and Thornton v Shoe Lane Parking Ltd [ 1971 ] 2 QB 163 ) .
16 These problems suddenly appeared quite separately from those dietary concerns about fats , fibre , sugar and salt which arose from the COMA report in 1984 , and which have been so widely used in food manufacturers ' advertising claims .
17 A call of nature interrupted my pleasure and I went out to the necessary house behind the tavern , nothing more than a hole in the ground enclosed by a shabby wooden palisade and a door which bolted from the inside .
18 In particular , we need to know far more about those numerous families which moved from the countryside but which experienced only a hum-drum life in the towns or at best only a modest prosperity .
19 We walked down an unsteady plank into the Sudan : a desert plain , dotted with scrub , stretching away to steep hills which rose from the sand like islands from a sea .
20 Alexei loosed , and the arrow leapt from the bow and embedded itself in the wooden spike which rose from the dome of a house two streets away .
21 So were the arguments used to justify aristocracy , which ranged from the claim that it was natural ( Aristotle ) to arguments based upon the wisdom of having a specialized governing group in a caste society ( Plato , Confucius and Hindu political thinkers ) .
22 But one can reasonably envisage a spectrum extending between two extremes of " language use " and " language exploitation " ; that is , between prose which conforms to the code ( Saussure 's langue ) and normal expectations of communication , and prose which deviates from the code in exploring new frontiers of communication .
23 Therefore it is for the district council to justify any local plan policy which deviates from the county structure plan .
24 As Dr Stevenson has put it : " English crowds appear to have killed no one deliberately in the various food disturbances which occurred from the beginning of the eighteenth century to the beginning of the nineteenth . "
25 Not the precise pattern of plants and trees beyond the human enclave , nor the affectionate grass , nor even the strange and delightful animal life — if it was animal life which peered from the undergrowth at the human installations with delicate curiosity .
26 I lie under the great sea almond tree which sprouts from the sand , looking up into its branches where light and shade dispute their rival territories .
27 She hated every minute of the tunnel : the thick , inky darkness , the icy water which dripped from the limestone roof ; the dank , sour smell and the lack of air .
28 One dubious consequence is that the short-term memory , of limited capacity compared with the virtually infinite capacity of long-term memory , is conceived as the internal stage on which exhibits from the store are manipulated .
29 It has particular significance for those churches who over the last decade , aided by the enthusiasm which stemmed from the Archbishop of Canterbury 's report ‘ Faith in the City ’ ( December , 1985 ) and the subsequently established Church Urban Fund , have tried to put their buildings , their membership and above all their local networks at the service of the wider community .
30 To his pleasant surprise he discovered that he was now able to think with an objective clarity which stemmed from the knowledge that he was now free for the first time in his life to speak his mind without fear or favour .
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