Example sentences of "it be from these [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | And yet we know the conditions under which the sequence was written and notice how fragile it is , how much a willed order , and how dependent upon a bravura performance — and suspect that it is from these elements that the permanent value of the poetry springs . |
2 | It is from these villages and their ski areas that the most impressive mountain scenery is to be seen . |
3 | It is from these visits above all that stems a remarkable paradox about these buildings . |
4 | The children were subject to regular ‘ disclosure therapy ’ , and it is from these disclosures that the allegations against the four South Ronaldsay families were made . |
5 | There she discovered a derelict funfair and it is from these experiences that the group of the most brightly coloured paintings , originates . |
6 | It is from these recommendations by the users that many of the recent changes in LIFESPAN have been made . |
7 | After the Normans left , the British monks continued experimenting and developing new apples , and it is from these varieties that Western apples are largely descended . |
8 | It was from these Mayors of the Palace — senior officers of the royal house — that Charlemagne 's ancestors were eventually to become kings in their own right . |
9 | It was from these vines , which stretched into Verzenay , Mailly and Verzy , that the wines of Sillery were made . |
10 | It was from these regions that Catalan industry was to draw its cheap labour , while the wild valleys of the Pyrenees were an enclosed world with a tradition of brigandage and family feuds ; here Carlism was to take on the violence and cruelty of the local society . |
11 | It was from these informants that he pieced together a picture of organised crime as being controlled by key personnel in the police force , local government , business and the legal profession . |
12 | It was from these territories that further political disruption derived , affecting directly the kingdom of Kent but drawing Mercians and eastern Saxons into a new power-struggle . |