Example sentences of "could [verb] from [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Contrasted in this way it seems improbable that madness and creativity could spring from the same source .
2 I contacted their next-of-kin and I undertook to pass on any scraps of information , or even rumour , that I could glean from every possible source .
3 There was everything that you particularly could want from a grand piano to a pin sold in Main Street .
4 A second difficulty could arise from the Labour Party rule ( again dating from 1981 ) that a Leader in office as Prime Minister can be challenged for the Leadership at a Party conference if an election is requested by a majority of the conference on a card vote .
5 The league programme had not been free from the upsets that could arise from the organizational confusion of most Edwardian football clubs .
6 This could range from a small lightweight kite to fly on a single line , through to a four-line aerobatic kite .
7 There is still a possibility the club could resign from the Northern League before Tuesday 's deadline .
8 Ideally , both father and son should attend so that they could discuss from a common base .
9 Ledeen always thought it self-evident that America should re-open contacts with Iran ; it could profit from the political fissures there , and could perhaps exploit the chaos that would undoubtedly follow the end of the Ayatollah 's rule .
10 Schönhuber manoeuvred around the ‘ old Nazi ’ tag , while making plain that not only was he proud to have been in the Waffen SS , but that there was indeed something worthwhile that Germans could salvage from the Nazi era .
11 Well I could speak from a personal experience .
12 The Exeter district , now free from the shackles of the Devon area authority , could negotiate from a stronger management position with the ‘ receiver ’ districts .
13 One of the hearing 's key witnesses , Dame Josephine Barnes , has estimated that — several thousand ’ British women could benefit from a favourable decision for Depo-Provera .
14 It is certainly working for the BBC Junior Library Services , and there must be other areas which could benefit from a combined approach .
15 Medical research could benefit from a prudent diet of simple data displays and careful thought about bias and confounding .
16 It decided that it could benefit from a smart up to date information section for liaison with press and public .
17 How many other aspects of social work practice could benefit from a fundamental reappraisal of guiding philosophies ?
18 The Labour party fears that somewhere there might be a single person who is also a millionaire who could benefit from a single person 's discount , so it is absolutely against the proposal .
19 The Commission , however , raised the possibility that importers ( e.g. an auctioneer ) could benefit from the temporary importation arrangements : VAT would be payable only if the item were sold , and it would be deductible .
20 UNCTAD 's annual report on the least developed countries ( LDCs ) , issued on Feb. 11 , said that these countries could benefit from the new international situation and especially from the settlement of long-standing conflicts , which would permit resources to be diverted from military purposes and the care of refugees to improve economic prospects .
21 Darlington College of Technology could benefit from the extra investment .
22 The idea is among those that have been taken over successfully into the theory of evolution by John Maynard Smith , who has shown why the evolutionarily stable strategy in a given situation may not be the strategy that would bring most benefit to every individual — the catch being that the only way all individuals could benefit from the best possible strategy , is for all to agree to pursue that strategy .
23 ‘ It had become necessary to dispel these doubts so that , with full trust restored , South Africa 's people could benefit from the technological development that has taken place as a result of this process . ’
24 The British acceptance of the US position in most respects at Bermuda reflected both its final abandonment of internationalization , and the realization that Britain , too , could benefit from the fifth freedom .
25 Voluntary tagging may also be adopted for sheep which could benefit from the positive identification of their flock of origin , such as pedigree animals or breeding females from farms operating under specific health schemes .
26 People could borrow from the social fund , he said , and get money that was interest-free , but money was taken from their income support immediately , even though that support was meant to be the lowest level of income on which one could cope .
27 Or else , in different mood , he could choose from a Modest Defence of Public Stews , or an Essay upon Whoring , a Dissertation on Wheedling , Flash Songs , etc. , a Dissertation upon Pissing , The Costly Whore , a comical history , and The Sad Effects of Sin .
28 Delegates could choose from the whole range of subjects throughout but the Dance Section had such a wide variety of topics and practical workshops that it hard to find time to fit everything in .
29 The increase in pancreatic lysosomal fragility could result from a direct effect of ethanol on lysosomal membranes .
30 This could result from a structural change in a single solid material , though no suitable materials are known .
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