Example sentences of "be taken from the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The package used allows the records in the Consultation List be ‘ flagged ’ to enable extracts to be taken from the Master List .
2 Prima facie a clause which specifies review date by reference to the commencement of the term requires the measurement to be taken from the date from which the term is computed , and not the date of the lease ( Beaumont Property Trust v Tai ( 1982 ) 265 EG 872 ) .
3 He had to tell the story umpteen times , getting a little further into the tale each time , whereupon she 'd ask to be taken from the beginning again .
4 And yet the impact on us is considerable , and I 'm seriously wondering whether the major spending committees ought not to look again at the budgets that they 're erm , and I 've discussed this with , and obviously education is the big problem , but er , I 'm not convinced that erm , the sums of money which we 're being asked to pay out , not be taken from the education budget without too dra drastic an effect on the school .
5 Then again you may be taken from the detention centre to Pentonville Prison and locked up there if you complain .
6 The object of this book being to consider those problems essentially of a legal nature which will commonly occur in all partnerships , this chapter is concerned with fundamental decisions which need to be taken from the outset of the firm 's existence ; Chapter 5 with day to day problems of management .
7 Although a biopsy may be taken from the retina itself for evidence of the virus , this procedure involves risks .
8 in areas supplied by river systems , such as the Thames Valley , water can be taken from the river , used and returned to it several times with the result that much of its initial quality has been lost .
9 Your poor visitors had come miles , had to wait to be taken from the prison gate to the gym , and then had to queue up waiting to hand in a bunch of flowers or something trivial , and then it all had to be signed for , then the screws came over to your table and you had to sign for it .
10 As part of the review , advice could be taken from the community health physician , the home economics adviser , a paediatrician , a senior officer of the LEA , local politicians and , most importantly , parents , children , lunch time supervisors and teachers .
11 If the theatre is a long distance away from the ward , equipment may be taken from the ward on a post-operative tray or carried on the theatre trolley .
12 How can anyone possibly budget to make the best use of the chargepayers ' money if unspecified amounts are to be taken from the Parish Council account by the bank ?
13 But Danny was beyond reasoning with and he had to be taken from the pool kicking and shouting .
14 The facts of that case can be taken from the headnote :
15 An example of this type of report can be taken from the administration of our employee benefits package .
16 Comfort may be taken from the fact that elements of the system have been working successfully in many LEAs .
17 Redirect input to be taken from the file E.CLI and exit .
18 He says the river needs to get back to flowing normally before water can be taken from the source .
19 After the vaginal examination a small sample will be taken from the urethra as this site may also be infected or may show signs of inflammation .
20 No swans ' , cranes ' , or bitterns ' eggs could be taken from the fen .
21 Timber for building and repair was very frequently ordered to be taken from the forest .
22 It estimated the minke population in the Antarctic as around 750,000 , and suggested that up to 100,000 could be taken from the area over the next decade .
23 Every year the birds are taken from the part of the river where the races take place both for their own and the rowers ' safety .
24 The better cod are taken from the sandbar when the water is coloured .
25 Transplanted cells are taken from the pancreas of a donor .
26 Following the vaginal tests , but at the same examination , tests are taken from the cervix .
27 Two-thirds of its imports of medicinal plants are taken from the wild .
28 Three examples are taken from the research outlined in the previous section as illustrative materials showing what is here meant by translation .
29 The more detailed and precise analyses on which these conclusions are based are taken from the Office of Population Censuses and Surveys ' 1976 Family Formation Survey ( Dunnell , 1979 ) , the latest available major national survey on this topic which includes detailed housing and fertility histories , but we simply do n't have more up-to-date evidence on which to make judgements .
30 The tissue samples are taken from the foetus at seven weeks old , when it is only about one inch long .
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