Example sentences of "from [art] consequences " in BNC.

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1 It really is not good enough for you to preen yourself in this way while Britain continues to suffer from the consequences of a largely uneducated workforce .
2 The Middle East is still suffering from the consequences of Jewish beastliness ( why could n't they have waited to be attacked first , like gents ? ) , including what someone euphemistically described as the ‘ re-unification ’ of Jerusalem .
3 BM assumes that people learn from the consequences of their behaviour .
4 He uses this as an argument for departing from the consequences of the words the testator has used .
5 And man is not separate from nature or immune from the consequences of his own actions .
6 Probably some , who considered the idea of Making Ends Meet unacceptable and unbecoming , i.e. those enjoying the thrusting Live-Now-Pay-Later lifestyle of the 1990s , would think differently if they knew that the cost of borrowing the £5,000 that would extricate them from the consequences of their cavalier attitude would cost them almost another £5,000 .
7 This accused PW of failing to protect BCCI 's ‘ innocent depositors and creditors from the consequences of poor practice at the bank of which the auditors were aware for years ’ .
8 Yet common observation suggests that some of today 's isolated old people suffer in part from the consequences of those periods of dislocation .
9 For such old people one has to ask whether acceptance of their professed wish to stay at home carries with it a responsibility to protect them from the consequences of their infirmity .
10 The long , rough guard hairs may have saved many a mountain goat from the consequences of an accidental slip .
11 Thus Jaq was saved from the consequences of his pronouncement .
12 In the standard works the need to protect the client from the consequences of his own ignorance have been emphasised .
13 Trade unions , public sector employment and fixed exchange rates are cast as bêtes noirs ; the first because of their wage monopoly power , the second because of its size and comparative insulation from market forces , and the last because it shields the labour force from the consequences of its own actions which would otherwise appear as inflationary import prices .
14 There is a contradiction between the wish to protect services and the wish to protect those too poor to pay from the consequences of their inability to pay .
15 The police , who routinely bend the rules in black areas , portray the youth of Brixton as doing the same , acting as if they were ‘ above the law ’ because of special measures designed to protect them from the consequences of their illegal actions — a fairly apt description of the police 's own position until very recently .
16 Secondly , a man can not escape from the consequences , as regards innocent third parties , of signing a document if , being a man of ordinary education and competence , he chooses to sign it without informing himself of its purport and effect .
17 However , it was always possible for the rich and the powerful to isolate themselves from the consequences of industrial growth by moving away from the factory areas to the more tranquil and less squalid atmosphere of the countryside .
18 The Harter Act voided any bill of lading clause that sought to relieve the carrier from the consequences of negligence in proper loading , stowage , custody , care , or proper delivery of the goods .
19 If a shipowner exercised due diligence to see that the vessel had been made seaworthy in all respects , the Harter Act exempted the shipowner from the consequences of errors in navigation and management .
20 The threat to European peace arose from the consequences of the slow decline of ‘ the sick man of Europe ’ and to the rivalries of the Christian powers over the disposal of the Ottoman patrimony .
21 Distress does not just arise from the symptoms of mental disorder but also from the consequences of the disorder as they affect the social and occupational life of the individual .
22 The Socialist parties suffered from the consequences of the Second International 's theory of revolution in stages ( which led the Argentine Socialist Party to support US interventions in the Caribbean ) and its under-estimation of the power of nationalism .
23 Society may not through its laws be able to protect the sufferers from addictive disease from the consequences of their addiction nor he able to protect itself from the consequences of their actions even if the law is applied universally to all addictive drugs including alcohol .
24 Society may not through its laws be able to protect the sufferers from addictive disease from the consequences of their addiction nor he able to protect itself from the consequences of their actions even if the law is applied universally to all addictive drugs including alcohol .
25 The family member will continue to do things for the primary sufferer ( providing food and shelter and other necessities of life , tidying up the messes , telling lies or half-truths to " cover up " , paying off debts or fines , providing bail , apologising on his or her behalf and generally doing everything possible to protect the primary sufferer from the consequences of his or her disease ) regardless of the demonstrable fact that these actions do not help the sufferer to get into recovery .
26 ( 4 ) The subsection relieves an applicant from the consequences of the failure to exhibit a notice in compliance with subss. ( 2 ) ( b ) or ( 3 ) ( b ) where the failure has been caused by the removal , obscuring , etc. , of the notice through no fault of the applicant and the applicant has taken reasonable steps to protect and replace the notice .
27 It is to be noted that the provisions contained in s.13(2) ( relief from the consequences of failure to comply with the Act ) , s.15(1) ( attendance at the meeting of a board by an applicant or his representative ) , 5.16 ( objections to an application ) , and s.18 ( giving reasons by a board for its decision ) apply to applications for a provisional grant .
28 Strictly , this is what is known as the weak cosmic censorship hypothesis : it protects observers who remain outside the black hole from the consequences of the breakdown of predictability that occurs at the singularity , but it does nothing at all for the poor unfortunate astronaut who falls into the hole .
29 Did she know her husband well enough to come to rescue him from the consequences of his own indiscretions ?
30 Will he further confirm that the consequences of the Scottish National party 's policies would be to deprive many hundreds of people of their employment at Rosyth and on the Clyde while still leaving Scotland at risk from the consequences of a nuclear attack on Barrow or on the north of England ?
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