Example sentences of "[Wh det] comes from the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The watch is British made except for the movement which comes from the best Swiss supplier .
2 P.gibbiceps is a loricariid which comes from the Peruvian and Brazilian Amazon .
3 P. gibbiceps is a loricariid which comes from the Peruvian and Brazilian Amazon .
4 Meanwhile , UMNO is using the tactics that come with experience : Malaysia 's prime minister , Dr Mahathir Mohamad , is ostracising the Kelantan chief minister and putting the squeeze on the state 's budget , two-fifths of which comes from the federal government .
5 But the balancing act does not have to be done in the United States with regard to AFDC ( and other programmes , such as Medicaid ) , because the government which distributes the benefits ( at the State level ) is not also responsible for raising most of the money to pay for them ( which comes from the Federal government ) .
6 At Gailey in Staffordshire , an unusually rich flora emerged in gravel workings abandoned in the 1960s , relics from the fen from which the place took its name , which comes from the Anglo-Saxon ‘ gagol leah ’ , the clearing in the gale , or bog myrtle , that aromatic wetland shrub which gives an extra tang to home-made gin .
7 The big firm thus minimises its holding of stock , and the small firm must bear the brunt of stockholding costs by holding sufficient stocks of its own finished goods to meet any order which comes from the big firm .
8 Australia is some 65% self-sufficient in oil , 90% of which comes from the Bass Strait field .
9 There was coppa , made from the muscular part of the pig 's neck where it meets the shoulder , and prosciutto , Parma ham , which comes from the same part of the pig as English gammon , and is cured in specially air-cooled rooms up in the foothills of the Apennines above Parma .
10 The name tystie , which comes from the old Norse language , may refer to the birds ’ high-pitched , ‘ reedy ’ call .
11 Not many developing countries would now see the activities of TNCs as impinging on their sovereignty … there are clear indications of a new pragmatic approach which comes from the growing belief that developing countries can negotiate agreements with TNCs in which the benefits of foreign investments are not necessarily outweighed by the cost ’ ( UNCTC , 1988a : p. 314 ) .
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