Example sentences of "it [verb] from the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It differs from the latter in that the viewpoint is not a single point but an artificial one extending the full length of the section .
2 In this respect it differs from the four perspectives discussed earlier in the chapter , which converge in adopting a social model of health for a restructuring of priorities and goals .
3 No , no , it 's not only their own er we have got er entries from W I members of other villages , but mainly its from the members who live in the villages and of course that is the beauty of the book , where it differs from the normal travel book , it 's the story of villages by people who actually live in them .
4 I find it convenient to treat it as Round 3 , because I think it differs from the two ‘ round-robin ’ tournaments more fundamentally than the two round-robin tournaments differ from each other .
5 It differs from the ordinary railway by using lightweight trains , calling at more convenient places and operating economically by the use of advanced technology now available for the custom-built rapid transit systems .
6 It differs from the standard sociological thesis in that it regards the gender difference as the most fundamental and most fully explanatory division in human society .
7 It differs from the other consumer goods in the private market in four ways .
8 It is not clear how it differs from the third tribal substage associated with settled agriculture .
9 He also said that he would not undertake to follow best practice while it differs from the operational guidelines .
10 It differs from the more-or-less subconscious concept of " the gentle rain from heaven " type of sedimentation , which probably only applies in special circumstances such as those of the oceanic oozes .
11 This was a large rectangular building in the same tradition as the mortuary houses at Phourni , with a rabbit warren of small chambers inside and a colonnade along the east front ; it differs from the Phourni mortuary houses in having been built all at once .
12 Peripheral awareness becomes progressively blurred as it recedes from the foveal zone and adjusts to an overall equilibrium .
13 That 's Soundgarden 's manager , it goes from the f—in' highest level of people in the music industry down to the street punk kids . ’
14 There will be variations which stem from the background and cultural heritage of the children who are in attendance , from where the school is situated as well as the resources ( in quality and quantity ) which it receives from the local authority .
15 It arose from the recent conquest of the northern coastal area as far as Anglesey by his friend Hugh , earl of Chester .
16 The Marxist value system arose in this vacuum of values and it arose from the multiplying effect that machinery had on man 's labour .
17 Harry Gent , at any rate , always claimed that it arose from the numerous illegal cockfights that were held in the cellar .
18 She has just taken office as president of the British Computer Society , and needs to make it jump from the seventies , where some believe it is still stuck , into the nineties .
19 By establishing the Centre in an academic institution it will be possible for it to benefit from the other resources of the University and at the same time enable the knowledge gained from the research to be linked directly to social work training .
20 I can still remember how good that coffee tasted , and how different it tasted from the common-room coffee I was used to .
21 Whilst the relevance of such information should not be denied , to present it divorced from the Latin American context leads to a seriously distorted picture of Soviet-Latin American relations .
22 It rose from the demolished vastness of the old Army Clothing Depot .
23 But there was another idea behind it , surprising in that it stemmed from the pragmatic Roman mind : it was actually thought that the veterans would become model citizens whom the newly conquered barbarians could observe and emulate .
24 The track had , he recalled , two branches , separating as it dropped from the heathy ridge that looked down upon the river .
25 The latter sturdy little ships were two and three deep alongside the large vessels discharging their cargoes in a frenzy of activity while overhead the air was thick with gulls , diving and squabbling over the loose fish as it spilled from the swinging baskets .
26 Tacit collusion is a form of non-co-operative equilibrium : it results from the rational , independent pursuit of self-interest , which courts tend to find not nearly as reprehensible , to say the least , as conspiratorial conduct .
27 It is the result of conscious planning by multinational corporations and banks and it results from the conscious actions taken by the US and UK governments in building the post-war world .
28 It came from the far side of the hotel ; I walked along the balcony to the far end .
29 It came from the following advisers : trade union , medical , employer , police , potential defendant , AA/RAC , the advisee 's own insurance company , workmate or fellow patient , friend , relative .
30 Howard Barker is described in the programme as a playwright ‘ known for his robust stance ’ — feet apart , biceps raised ? — ‘ against the tide of TV obsessed populist drama , ’ but the dialogue in A Hard Heart sounds as if it came from the violet-ink-filled pen of Oscar Wilde .
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