Example sentences of "from which all [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To flesh out the story , the DIA provided him with a German mailing address , Postfach 1151 , Geilhausen 6460 , from which all correspondence , including anything from the DIA , would be readdressed to Coleman 's maildrop in Barrington , Illinois .
2 It was Liu Hui 's Chiu Chang Suan Shu , his ‘ Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art ’ , the famous third century treatise from which all Han science began .
3 Moreover , federal states , whether they are based on Christian Democratic ‘ subsidiarity ’ theories or on Anglo-Saxon separation of power theories , have been unable to resist the tendency to centralise , from which all states suffer .
4 It provided a full and comprehensive check against dishonesty and speculation as , for example , with the existence of a single Exchequer account into which all receipts were paid and from which all payments were drawn .
5 Maharishi Yogi identified it as ‘ the creative field of intelligence from which all knowledge and all possibilities for physical existence is manifested . ’
6 The sad walls , from which all colour had faded , were covered by dark cracked mirrors and big sooty paintings which disappeared one by one when we were out , though there were no other signs of burglary .
7 He shows yellow teeth between grey lips and says in a voice from which all colour has faded , ‘ Is n't there enough trouble in the world without youngsters like you joining in ? ’
8 They regarded the world as being based on a single live space-filling substance from which all things developed spontaneously by the interplay of opposed processes such as separation and combination or rarefaction and condensation .
9 love from which all loves flow .
10 While superficially this sounds sensible enough , other countries including the UK are concerned that it will reinforce the suspicion across the Atlantic and in Asia that the EC 's main preoccupation is to build a fortress Europe from which all others are excluded .
11 Oakeshott does not agree with Hart 's views either about the need for a ‘ minimum content of natural law ’ or that there can be a single ultimate rule of recognition in the sense of an unconditional and unquestionable norm from which all others derive their authority .
12 By an extensive study of the tracheae which precede , and in a general sense coincide with the positions of the veins , these writers constructed a hypothetical system of venation from which all others might be derived ( Comstock , 1918 ) .
13 But a far profounder sense , the source from which all others spring .
14 An economic embargo had been established in late March , and in early May the government had attempted to increase the pressure by declaring a 50-mile " exclusion zone " around the island , from which all ships and aircraft would be prohibited .
15 A gas that is present only in a trace — carbon dioxide — is , in practice , the stuff from which all flesh is made .
16 For him the Bible was a precise historical narrative from which all lessons of conduct could be drawn .
17 In the long run administrators try to make capitalism a positive-sum game from which all classes can gain .
18 The Library of Congress Catalog and printed card service , and the weekly , monthly , quarterly , annual and subsequent cumulations of British National Bibliography , plus its own printed card service , derive from this data base , and it is hoped to begin experiments towards the provision of a similar computer store of catalogue data on audio-visual materials in due course from which all manner of useful selected print-outs can be derived .
19 The political parties of the narrow and fragmented centre of the political spectrum , from which all governments had to be drawn , were agreed only on the fundamental issue of preserving the Fourth Republic : they had , as it were , reserved their right to disagree on everything else .
20 And the bar on which they stood had evolved from a simple counter or hatch to something approaching the form we know today : in his Encyclopaedia of Cottage , Farm and Villa Architecture of 1833 J C Loudon described the ideal bar ( the place ‘ from which all orders are issued ’ ) as being ‘ of some size ’ , with ‘ commanding views of the front entrance hall and back entrance ’ .
21 Instead of operating with a deflated matrix , we operate on the original matrix A ( or a part of it ) with a column vector from which all contributions from x1 have been " swept " away .
22 He put his hand in his jacket pocket , searching for his wallet , and as he did , Doug , serious now , yanked Harry towards him and whispered in tones from which all traces of his cockney accent were now absent .
23 As at Buckland , all of the original divisions have been removed to make one long , characterless room , from which all trace of its former features has disappeared .
24 ‘ It is thought by some , ’ said Megan , in a smooth lecturer 's voice from which all trace of her faint Welsh lilt had vanished , ‘ that the Scottish brochs may be an extension of the southern round-house culture , as exemplified in some sites of south-western England , but this seems unlikely , in view of- ’
25 Teachers felt that this text offered them many opportunities for the development of the understanding of parental roles and it was thought to be a book from which all sorts of related topic work could be derived .
26 We should therefore be suspicious of any expository textbook which presents the criminal law as if it could be stated in a finite number of propositions from which all solutions could ultimately be derived without further choices at the point of application .
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