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

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1 To dismiss this comment simply as Bridgeman being a poacher turned gamekeeper would be to miss the point , which is that the war had allowed the Conservatives to become gamekeepers again , whereas from 1902 to 1914 there had been genuine concern that they might be permanently banished from the estates of power .
2 From rates derived from the occupiers of property .
3 Although a wizard affected by this spell may not cast spells , he may continue to use Dispel cards from the Winds of Magic .
4 In the 1930s Popular Frontists had sought to ‘ follow the French example … win from the enemies of peace and the working class those symbols and that ‘ heritage ’ that are the British equivalents of Liberty , Equality , Fraternity and the Marseillaise . ’
5 It is true enough that one could not start one 's language learning from the laws of physics and logic ; much is needed before we can even begin to understand these .
6 If one tries to deduce human behavior from the laws of science , one gets caught in the logical paradox of self-referencing systems .
7 Apart from the laws of war , many other parts of international law have a bearing on issues related to nuclear weapons .
8 The decision in the GCHQ case which was discussed earlier , by focussing attention away from the sources of government power to its nature and effect , has arguably assisted the extension of judicial review to cover rules which ‘ lack any visible means of legal support ’ .
9 That film is generally taken as marking a shift in Ealing 's focus from the sources of energy to the forces of repression .
10 Coleridge became aware soon after their lectures began that Southey 's manner had grown ‘ cold and gloomy ’ , and that he had started to back away from the principles of Pantisocracy .
11 It ordered the state authorities of Armenia and Azerbaijan to " enter into talks immediately to conclude an inter-republican treaty on restoring trust and accord between peoples , proceeding from the principles of equality of rights and the sovereignty and territorial integrity of both republics " [ for February USSR Supreme Soviet debate on Transcaucasia see p. 37257 ] .
12 Sometimes this obstinacy was the refuge of the poor man who can not afford change and to whom stagnation has become a habit of mind necessary for survival ; at other times it represented a sound rejection of improper techniques culled by ‘ philosophical ’ amateurs from the journals of French and English agricultural societies .
13 Among about 400 guests in the Atrium at the Millbank centre , just along the road from the Houses of Parliament , were authors , entertainers , stars from stage , screen and sport — and a smattering of ordinary people from worthy walks of life such as ambulance drivers , nurses , teachers and charity workers .
14 It 's not surprising that so many ministers and MPs head there — it 's only a five-minute walk from the Houses of Parliament .
15 The link is the final section of what is , effectively , a dual carriageway from the Houses of Parliament via Canary Wharf to the A13 at Canning Town .
16 The reports ( ‘ surveys ’ ) which stem from the findings of work like that of the APU provide teachers in school with a much broader base upon which to evaluate their current practice .
17 It is apparent from the findings of fact that the justices made no findings , or if they did they did not record them , as to whether ( i ) the child was likely to abscond from any other description of accommodation , or ( ii ) that if he absconded he would be likely to suffer significant harm .
18 The flight is from the impingements of blood ( the red of the tulips ) and pain and from the complexities of close human relationships .
19 The actors from the Rites Of Passage company will stop off at Methodist Central Hall for a flashback to the Last Supper .
20 I had had nothing to read for three months , and now that we had some time to ourselves reading was a good way of distracting myself from the immediacies of life around me .
21 Cinema admissions had indeed increased as people sought escape at the movies from the horrors of war , and the flow of French and Italian imports had been disrupted , but the screen-time made available had been almost totally absorbed by American pictures : by 1918 some 80 per cent or films shown in Britain were from the US .
22 It was as if Gillray 's avaricious monarch was more of an affront than the voluptuary suffering from the horrors of dissipation .
23 In any case , a Conservative-Liberal alliance to exclude Labour from office depended on Asquith 's support ; and this he declined to countenance , in spite of what he described as ‘ appeals , threats , prayers from all parts , and from all sorts and conditions of men , women and lunatics , to step in and save the country from the horrors of Socialism and Confiscation ’ .
24 Callinicos ' Marxism has been repelled from the ramparts of pluralism for being … well , Marxist .
25 from the wilds of whitewater we 're off to the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire for the start of our action round up … there we 're meeting up with greyhound trainer Tony Meek … and his two dogs …
26 Since there are no authenticated figures showing the costs of running the lift , some idea might be gained from the records of running costs of the Anderton Lift .
27 And what happens in actual human situations which are what get me , and I 'm going to give you three and I guarantee their genuineness you will doubt them all I have not the least fear but I guarantee you their genuineness , they come from the records of Age Concern Scotland of which I am the president .
28 From the records of property holding in the city of London between c 1200 and 1666 , it is possible to trace a remarkable sequence of changes in the fabric of the city , the density of settlement , the property market , and the social and economic structure .
29 Some fell and were dragged on by their comrades , others had to crawl as best they could , their heads barely emerging from the puffs of dust , across the open space between the Cutcherry and the churchyard wall .
30 Like a thunderbolt the Elves descended from the mountains of Caledor .
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