Example sentences of "follow from [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In the future , broader co-operation and co-ordination may follow from the firm basis of this work .
2 The postscript to this is that such a conclusion would follow from the revised contractualism and , I suggest , is in the mainstream of our moral thinking .
3 Having decided upon a starting place , what can follow from the current state ?
4 a ) objective and approach : The objective of the research will follow from the particular requirement for information identified by the marketing function .
5 The intrinsic value of the ball , in contrast — say its beauty — would follow from the intrinsic nature made up of such properties but not itself be part of that in virtue of which two balls might be exactly alike .
6 Initially this work has followed from the general acceptance of the WIMP system as an effective form of human-computer interface .
7 If a head popped up to study the terrain , a bullet followed from the other side .
8 A further problem of ageing , which in part follows from a greater life expectancy , relates to retirement .
9 It follows from the above case that Reg 2(1) of the UK Regulations does not comply with Community law , since the UK Regulations currently state that ‘ undertaking ’ includes any trade or business but does not include any undertaking or part of an undertaking that is not in the nature of a commercial venture .
10 It follows from the above discussion that placing a certain element in theme position does not necessarily constitute a marked thematic choice .
11 Since p , V and U are all properties of a system , that is they are all state functions , it follows from the above equation that H must also be a state function .
12 It follows from the above account of the expectations-augmented Phillips curve that in the short-run , both Y and P rise ( and unemployment falls ) , but that in the long-run , unemployment returns to the NUP and Y falls back to that level associated with the NUP .
13 6.4 There is again a significant prediction about syntactic behaviour that follows from the above account ; once again , we have in these adjectives a group which will be excluded from predicative position .
14 It follows from the First Premise introduced at the beginning of this chapter , that it must be an article of belief in the Created God that this first pre-life period in the story of the universe made no contribution to the creation of the God which was to be born , as was mankind , out of the life to come , except that it may have been the source of the basic origin of life .
15 What follows from the normal range of experience depends very much on the effects produced by the child 's altered condition on the parents and , in turn , by the way in which their parental reaction impinges on the child .
16 Of course qualities like money , responsibility and promotion opportunities still remain important , but a degree of gender-differentiation in the dimension of prestige follows from the broad structure of gender-differentiation in the occupational world .
17 This general pattern follows from the cheaper cost of gamete production in males than females .
18 The unsatisfactory conclusion that the conditional is about so much , or rather the unsatisfactory conclusion that the conditional is about a further statement about so much , follows from the metalinguistic view .
19 He must decide , for example , whether it actually follows from the assumed convention of legislation that Elmer has a right to his inheritance because of the statute of wills , or from the putative convention of precedent that Mrs. McLoughlin had a right to compensation because of past judicial decisions .
20 This follows from the probable distinction between the Fort Ternan and Maboko/Nachola material : because the type species of Kenyapithecus is K. wickeri from Fort Ternan , the generic name Kenyapithecus has to remain with the Fort Ternan material and forms the root for the second tribe Kenyapithecini .
21 It follows from the second law of thermodynamics that , for spontaneous processes .
22 It follows from the last paragraph that there are at least two different ways of studying a community 's use of language and attitudes towards it .
23 Rawls shows neither that this assumption follows from the Kantian insight nor that it leads to neutral political concern .
24 The second major problem which follows from the conventional categorization is of great sociological interest .
25 This follows from the linear law of Hooke relating stress and strain and from the definition given earlier that .
26 This use , then , also follows from the potential meaning of to postulated above .
27 This follows from the natural reading of the legislation and although the case of Congreve v IRC ( 1948 ) 30 TC 163 was overruled by the House of Lords in Vestey v IRC on the central point of what individuals can be liable to tax under s739 , this point was not specifically referred to by the House of Lords .
28 That the revolution must succeed does not , of course , follow from the economic argument alone , even if Marx has got it right .
29 Pre-Victorian pubs were largely run on the basis of waiter-service , following from the original concept that the pub was a house open to the public for refreshment — hence the term ‘ public house ’ .
30 A simple formula exists for calculating the sum of such a series : This amount represents the total increase in national income following from the initial injection of government expenditure .
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