Example sentences of "for [noun] [to-vb] from the " in BNC.

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1 Mr Angell responded that it would not be feasible for Moscow to leap from the present unconvertible rouble to the complex Western system of floating exchange rates , or to a dollar or yen-backed rouble .
2 The evaluators were convinced that the opportunities for schools to benefit from the expertise and efforts of the DCSLs were considerably enhanced by the project .
3 At appropriate stocking rates there is a natural tendency for oxygen to move from the atmosphere where the concentration is high , to the water where it is low and conversely for carbon dioxide to move from water with a higher concentration to the atmosphere where it is lower .
4 There was a clear tendency for population to decentralize from the core of the metropolitan areas to the ring ; in 1931 71 per cent of the total metropolitan population of England and Wales was found in metropolitan cores , whereas in 1966 the proportion was 60 per cent .
5 A more open and informed attitude to the problems of stress also allows more opportunities for individuals to emerge from the isolation of their own anxieties ( ESAC 1990:26 ) .
6 In a world of perfect competition it would not be possible for managers to deviate from the profit-maximization norm for any length of time even if they were tempted to pursue their own rather than the shareholders ' interests .
7 This , in turn , will make it harder for diggers to profit from the crude — and illegal — looting of ancient sites .
8 This had opened the way for landlords to profit from the programme .
9 Ecstasy is also available at schools and at clubs , where often special ‘ chill-out ’ rooms are provided for users to recover from the effects of the drug .
10 It was taking time for Britain to recover from the First World War .
11 However , the prevailing view seems to be that it is preferable for women to withdraw from the labour market rather than for men to have to retire five years earlier .
12 This will occur if the viscosity of the magma is low enough for crystals to escape from the boundary layer on the convective timescale rather than remaining to contribute to the density evolution of the boundary layer .
13 Figure 2 b shows the crystal size that must be exceeded for crystals to escape from the thermal boundary layer for a magma with viscosity of 30Pas , this being typical for basalt .
14 ‘ It is pretty clear they have got the message from institutional shareholders , ’ but he warned that it could take years for Barclays to recover from the bad lending made in the late 1980s .
15 Thirdly , who rang the tocsin bell and , at the same time , so subtly arranged for Mowbray to fall from the parapet ? ’
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