Example sentences of "to emerge [prep] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Former President Efraín Ríos Montt , heading the No-Venta ( " No Sell-Out " ) coalition of three small right-wing parties and promising a clampdown on law and order to stem escalating violence , had for some time been thought likely to emerge as winner of the presidential elections .
2 Men of industry and commerce began to emerge as men of some wealth .
3 For some minutes after he had dragged his coat over his head and entered the house through the back door , the children waited , trustingly expecting him to emerge with Henry in his hands .
4 But it is a necessary price to pay , if we want students to emerge with minds of their own , who do not merely know but understand in some depth what they know , and who are able to form and develop their own ideas .
5 It will no doubt already be apparent that no simple account to latent inhibition is likely to emerge in spite of the seeming simplicity of the basic experimental procedure .
6 The dinner itself , a ritual of many courses , begins to emerge in relays from the swing doors of the kitchen , the food bland and unexceptionable , but plentiful and somehow sanctified by being served by the immaculate waiters in sashes and gloves .
7 In consequence , fascism was to emerge in Britain in the 1920s as a supposed imitation of Mussolini 's example in Italy , although in reality it was little more than ‘ Conservatism with knobs on ’ , in Arnold Leese 's graphic definition of the British fascists .
8 The guide is the first to emerge from FEMA since the 1950s .
9 The most coherent films to emerge from Elstree during this time were both set in the Edwardian era , Losey 's glorious The Go-Between ( 1970 ) and The Railway Children ( 1970 ) , with the latter aiming at that much-lamented but largely-departed family audience .
10 If there is one lesson to emerge from consideration of the changing balance of dependence and independence in old age , it is the flexibility and adaptability for which old people are given so little credit .
11 The article says : ’ Mr. Major disagreed with the delegation 's gloomy forecast of when the recovery in construction would begin , saying he expected industry to emerge from recession in the middle of next year . ’
12 Curiosity satisfied , it is rather a relief to emerge from darkness to daylight .
13 In most cases , the Americans have the advantage of ready access to water , which is collected from rivers , lakes and reservoirs and pumped through pipes to emerge from cannon on the slopes .
14 As praise costs so little , this is a regrettable finding to emerge from studies of parent-child relationships .
15 In the midday heat they had foraged in shady woods for berries and interesting objects , to emerge from shadow to the fields ' glaring yellow , heat coming in buffeting waves across the metallic corn .
16 Aimed at young families , small business users and aspiring professionals , the car is the first new model to emerge from Rover since the 800 series in 1986 .
17 Among the most important evidence to emerge from analysis of Mansell 's start are that his Ferrari was not lined up straight and telemetry on the Ferrari indicated that he had fiercely defended his position , turning right twice to close out Prost .
18 The facts that seem to emerge from analysis of the recent controlled studies are : ( a ) pure ethanol given intravenously , orally , or by an intragastric route , in different concentrations does not stimulate gastrin release whether or not it stimulates acid secretion ; ( b ) among the alcoholic beverages beer and wine produce pronounced stimulation of gastrin release whereas whisky , gin , cognac , and vodka do not have any effect on gastrin concentrations .
19 The City of London raised a loan of £100,000 , which was gratefully accepted ; an elderly duke volunteered to emerge from retirement to lead the fleet , an offer which was declined .
20 Indeed , for a country struggling to emerge from years of war , the election may be a mixed blessing .
21 Not only did this new attitude towards children begin to emerge among educationalists in the middle decades of the eighteenth century , but we can deduce also from the success of small private academies , from the development of a new kind of children 's literature , and from the vastly increased expenditure on the amusements and pleasures of children , that parents , too , were no longer regarding their children as sprigs of old Adam whose wills had to be broken .
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