Example sentences of "it [vb -s] from this [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It appears from this case ( see also Long v Lloyd [ 1958 ] 1 WLR 753 ) that the rules of acceptance are substantially the same as those applicable in cases of breach of condition ( see Chapter 9 ) .
2 It seems from this evidence that living with relatives when a marriage ends is considered in a rather similar way to living with relatives in other circumstances .
3 It seems from this work that theory and practice must be directly linked , and the main area in which to teach these linkages is the clinical area .
4 But , it is it seems from this report that is in front of us that it is now appropriate for the URC to take a new step with regard to the local ministry of elders .
5 It seems from this statement that there was not one class of domestic servants , but within this type of employment people belonging to different classes .
6 It emerges from this case law that Article 190 requires that regulations , directives , and decisions should contain a statement of the reasons which led the institution to adopt them , so as to make possible a review by the Court of Justice and so that the Member States and the nationals concerned may have knowledge of the conditions under which the Community institutions have applied the Treaty .
7 Moreover , it follows from this necessity for an absolute sovereign , that an eventual transfer of allegiance is inevitable when the ‘ sovereign ’ fails to govern , and keep the civil peace .
8 It follows from this proposition that manipulating differential hemispheric activity should induce changes in direction of lateral eye gaze .
9 The whole of the double-entry system is based upon this principle and it follows from this principle that at any time the total debits must equal the total credits and by adding the two a check can be made on the double entry ; this is one of the main advantages of the system .
10 It follows from this rule that and .
11 For it follows from this distinction that we see only the appearances of things , images of them in our minds , not the things themselves , ‘ so that , for aught we know , all we see , hear , and feel , may be only phantom and vain chimera , and not at all agree with the real things ’ .
12 Having countered the notion that the artist is an anti-social creature , he proceeds to argue : It follows from this premise that subject matter in art must play a crucial role .
13 It follows from this reasoning that a company law focussed on the public interest should define management duties exclusively in terms of profit maximisation and should more generally provide a legal framework orientated towards that end .
14 It follows from this analysis that the focusing hypersurface is a curvature singularity except in the special case in which one of the Kasner exponents is zero .
15 It follows from this analysis that the provision of the report to the borrower is an action by the building society and that if it is prepared without appropriate skill and care the ground of the complaint , namely breach of the society 's contractual obligation , falls within paragraph 1 ( a ) of Part III to Schedule 12 .
16 It follows from this letter that the facts are not in dispute .
17 It follows from this view of inhibitory input that activation at the letter detection level will be all-or-none : when a letter is presented , the detector for this letter is fully activated , and the detectors for all other letters are completely silent .
18 It follows from this definition that the analysis of a pattern of travel in terms of trip chains can embody necessary interactions between successive journeys a person makes .
  Next page