Example sentences of "stem from the " in BNC.

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1 It may be fashionable to decry Robbins — and many of the universities ' problems stem from the rapid expansion of the 1960s which followed his report — but his pertinent description of the aims of higher education is no less valid today than when it was written .
2 The widely-held fears stem from the reasonable assumption that an independent or a devolved Scotland would be incapable of existing without considerable handouts from Whitehall and would have an administration with more than a left-wing tinge .
3 Marginality can be criticised on the same grounds , that is to say a separation of rural and urban is not useful since many of the problems of rural areas stem from the integration of the two .
4 The theorists ' problems stem from the many different ways quarks have of getting from A to B. On the way , they can emit or absorb any number of gluons ( particles which carry the strong nuclear force ) , so the possibilities are endless .
5 Not all of the factors responsible for the differences between the nature conservation/agriculture interface in the UK and French uplands stem from the LFA Directive .
6 A lot of the misconceptions stem from the days when catgut and braided nylon was the stuff you tied your hook to ; when nylon monofilament was something new and therefore not to be trusted .
7 The reasons for the ultimately poor response from architects probably stem from the conditions .
8 All psychological fears and sadnesses stem from the child ; and all the dogmatic assertions stem from the parent ; and the adult part may be recognised in a person 's speech by such qualified remarks as , ‘ I think such and such is true , ’ or ‘ If we try that , it might result in … ’
9 All psychological fears and sadnesses stem from the child ; and all the dogmatic assertions stem from the parent ; and the adult part may be recognised in a person 's speech by such qualified remarks as , ‘ I think such and such is true , ’ or ‘ If we try that , it might result in … ’
10 The disadvantages , however , stem from the limitations of this form of interview as a scientific tool .
11 In transactional analysis ( TA ) it is assumed that our habitual ways of feeling and behaving largely stem from the way we feel about ourselves in relation to other people .
12 These achievements stem from the core aims which link with school values , concern for quality in education , and the merit of the ‘ partnership ’ notion , providing a framework for activity .
13 The aggressive , destructive behaviour that is often seen in hyperkinetics usually develops later than the other symptoms , and may be largely a response to feelings of frustration that stem from the other symptoms .
14 The present difficulties stem from the recession and the collapse of the housing market .
15 Most of the historic buildings stem from the 18th Century when they were town houses for the more prosperous traders .
16 There seems to be a shroud of mystery wrapped around the existence of so many artists that must , in part , stem from the romanticised time when artistic practice was mainly reserved for self-supporting male painters and sculptors , or those few working under patronage .
17 You say in your book that many of your problems stem from the fact that you were the wife of an ambitious politician .
18 There may be demands in the sense that there are always obstacles to be overcome but these stem from the nature and the variability of the situation he is in ; that is , the materials he has to deal with or the environment he has to move through .
19 There will be variations which stem from the background and cultural heritage of the children who are in attendance , from where the school is situated as well as the resources ( in quality and quantity ) which it receives from the local authority .
20 The reports ( ‘ surveys ’ ) which stem from the findings of work like that of the APU provide teachers in school with a much broader base upon which to evaluate their current practice .
21 These changing attitudes in part reflect changes in attitudes in the world at large but they also stem from the evolution of our concepts of ‘ mind ’ and its possible physical bases .
22 Although most of the existing dubious credits stem from the speculative frenzy of the late 1980s , banks have begun to admit that an increasing number of loans are non-performing because of general economic weakness .
23 As Raymond Williams puts it , speaking not specifically about the family but more generally about myths of a rural past which was happier and more stable , such myths stem from the contradictions of the present which are difficult to contain .
24 The kinds of untruth and distortion that this leads to , he says , stem from the fact that it ‘ reckons without the patent tenability and durability of deviant enterprise , and without the subjective capacity of man to create novelty and manage diversity ’ ( ibid. , p. 44 ) : that is , correctionalism is insensitive to the more positive features of deviance .
25 In this sense the elements of a people 's ‘ real ’ universe can be ‘ turned upside down ’ as easily as those of its linguistic universe , since their apprehension of both stem from the same fundamental principles of thought and meaning construction .
26 Most important of all , however , are the changes that stem from the relationship itself : an over-anxious mother sees her new baby prosper , gains confidence , and treats him with ever-increasing assurance .
27 These shortcomings stem from the vagueness and dubiousness of the demand that a ‘ large number ’ of observations be made under a ‘ wide variety ’ of circumstances .
28 Furthermore , they displayed a freshness , vitality and love of experimentation that probably stem from the fact that Zeng is a completely untrained photographer .
29 We shall return to this issue later , but it surprised me to discover that the population of Waltham Forest needed more expenditure per head for such deprivation than that of Cleveland and about the same amount as Knowsley ; similar observations stem from the comparison of Hackney and Westminster , although this is hampered by including components referring to ILEA .
30 They stem from the environment in which the individual lives and from the people with whom the individual forms relationships .
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