Example sentences of "from [art] [adv] [num ord] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 From the later seventh century B.C. the Greeks colonized Sicily and southern Italy but it was the Etruscans who introduced a high culture to the central area of the peninsular .
2 An example from the later fifth century is illustrated in fig. 166 .
3 Flexible though the Formalist/Prague School approach may be in this respect , it still attaches overwhelming importance to the element of innovation in literature , thus reflecting the permanent revolution in poetic language , and in literary forms in general , brought about by the modernist movement from the later nineteenth century onwards .
4 From the later fourth century , this ideal offered puzzled Christians a means to define their identity without ambiguity .
5 With the introduction of steam power from the later eighteenth century , the necessity for a streamside location disappeared and , particularly in regard to cotton spinning , a climate of high humidity became a more important requirement .
6 Princeton University Press is offering Fields of Vision : Landscape Imagery and National Identity in England and the United States by Stephen Daniels ( £32.25 , $45 ) , in which the author explores the ways in which artists from the later eighteenth century to the present day have used landscape as a way of embodying their national feelings , and how painters like Turner and Constable contributed to a ‘ myth ’ of national identity .
7 Pitchford is one of England 's most important timber-framed houses , dating from the later sixteenth century and in the same family since 1473 .
8 Its importance was institutionalised in the emergence from the later sixteenth century onwards in many states of officials whose duty it was to supervise the reception of foreign diplomatic representatives and smooth out differences between them on questions of ceremonial and precedence .
9 Workshops may have existed , as Dickinson suggests , from the later sixth century , but this need not affect any argument regarding the method of manufacture .
10 From the later sixth century they are characterised by features of maenadism as actually practised : the ‘ wing-dance ’ here , and the thyrsus ( a bunch of ivy-leaves tied to a fennel-stalk ) , as in fig. 104 , from a picture of the Death of Pentheus by the Kleophrades Painter 's great rival the Berlin Painter .
11 But will it be fully competitive from the very first GP ? ’
12 From the very first day I enjoyed it .
13 Diana 's first public engagement as Princess of Wales was , appropriately , a tour of the principality , and it was obvious from the very first day that she had an extraordinary talent .
14 From the very first day I saw him I began writing poems to him that later grouped themselves into the sequence entitled ‘ Suite Salmantina ’ which , with other poems about Spain , forms the central part of my collection called The Prodigal Son : Poems 1956–1959 .
15 From the very first day that the permanent way
16 From the very first day , use what you know , and do it repeatedly with different people .
17 Super Sales Grit — SSG — is a miracle ingredient that has been trained into every Rentokil sales consultant from the very first day out with a sales manager to the final night of introductory sales consultants courses .
18 So out of the 16,000 Pathfinders I personally recruited from the very first day of my appointment to the Pathfinder Force , to the last day of the war , I am not aware of one occasion on which a member of aircrew , whatever his category , was dealt with under the terms of the AMO .
19 This is evident from the very first scene .
20 The term mission is a precise one , especially in the light of a discursive shift which is evident from the very first lines of the chapter on adult education which follows :
21 As Fig. 4.5 shows , the change of context experienced by group D produced a substantial loss of vigour in the CR , evident from the very first trial of the test .
22 ‘ She was fighting from the very first minute and she is still fighting . ’
23 Jensen insisted he relished the hostile atmosphere , but joined his manager 's condemnation of Buksch , saying : ‘ The ref lost control from the very first minute .
24 To prevent the reactions from occurring in the first place , filtered blood has to be used from the very first transfusion and 99% of white cells have to be removed .
25 She got no further , the words swallowed up as he bent and took her mouth in a punishing kiss that stole her breath from the very first touch of his lips .
26 Because from the very first syllable she had recognised it — even through the door .
27 From the very first page , where he both mistranscribes and then mistranslates further the opening of Terce in a Book of Hours , he matches marginal pictures with random words of text beside them , wildly associating words out of context with pictures near them in the margins , apparently grasping the flimsiest of puns and word associations .
28 From the very first time you took me to the pictures , you started to change me , shape me in your own image , make me like you .
29 From the very first time she 'd taken him down to meet her family , she had seen that they had n't liked him .
30 From the very first time Pip goes to visit , to play , at Miss Havisham 's Satis House , he was not content with what he had and he wanted much more .
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