Example sentences of "have move from [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | To keep existing contracts on schedule while meeting emergency requirements from the ministry , the site has moved from a five-to a seven-day week , and working hours since early November have more or less doubled . |
2 | In eight years Britain has moved from a current account surplus of 2.5 per cent of GDP to a deficit of 4 per cent of GDP . |
3 | MICHAEL BRIAL has moved from a likely Wallaby tour drop-out to a possible starter for Saturday 's game against Wales B in Cardiff . |
4 | In an internal reorganisation Jim Kennedy has moved from the National Certificate Unit to take charge of assessment of Advanced Courses . |
5 | Are employment figures alone sufficient to infer that the economy has shifted from a goods to a service economy , that the economy has moved from an industrial stage to a post-industrial stage . |
6 | We must also ensure that the escalation of costs does not lead to elderly people having to move from a single-bedded room to shared accommodation , which would be a lowering of standards in their residential home — and it is their home . |
7 | By the second year , it had moved from a sectoral base to a country base , to help achieve cross-sector policy objectives . |
8 | There were instances where young families had moved from an urban to a rural life and now wanted nothing else than a farming career . |
9 | By the time that his German State Workbook was issued on 4 October , Joyce and his wife had moved from the busy Friedrichstrasse area to the semi-wooded suburban avenues of Charlottenburg . |
10 | Hosts Anne and Dave Bell have moved from the old pub in Stranton to the new Tap and Spile . |
11 | So we have moved from the intricate and sombre medieval stained-glass window to the brilliant glass-clad office-block facade reflecting the sky line , yet the starting materials remain practically the same . |
12 | Others have moved from the older , nineteenth century houses of the twilight zones around the centres of the towns to new estates on the edges of the towns or to other towns in the region . |