Example sentences of "from [art] [noun pl] 's " in BNC.

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1 Since no violence is involved , others do not suffer from the satyāgrahi 's mistakes , only the satyāgrahi himself .
2 At the fall of France , Donald Caskie had refused a place on the last boat home and instead had gone south where , working from the Seamen 's Mission in Marseilles , he had hidden hundreds of allied servicemen and helped them to escape over the Pyrenees into Spain .
3 The uproar in the middle of the night when Bernard Murphy rolled home fighting drunk from the seamen 's club had to be heard to be credited .
4 Seen from the women 's angle , things could sometimes appear differently .
5 Commanding officers were asked to clamp down on harmful initiation ceremonies , and ‘ agony aunts ’ from the Women 's Royal Voluntary Service were installed to provide a sympathetic hearing for bullied soldiers .
6 The late non-appearance of Stroitel Kiev , the Soviet champions , from the men 's tournament and BCN Sao Paulo , the holders and Brazilian champions , from the women 's has left the line-up looking sicklier than ever .
7 Brig Ramsey arrives from the Women 's Royal Army Corps ( WRAC ) , where she was the final director before its abolition last week under Options for Change .
8 In July , 1911 , a Central Care Committee ( CCC ) was appointed , with members drawn from the Women 's Settlement , the Sunday School Union , the Children 's Service Union , Church of England Sunday Schools , the CLB , the BB , the Boy Scouts , the Street Children 's Union , the Church of England Men 's Society , and the Trades Council .
9 The church was not in permanent use and had no resident vicar but it held occasional services and now at Christmas an elderly cleric in retirement had volunteered to conduct a sung Eucharist at nine-thirty with the help of a volunteer choir assembled from the Women 's Institute .
10 That of women 's or gender consciousness emerges from the women 's movement when consciousness-raising helped to make women aware of their specific position and disadvantages within contemporary society .
11 From the women 's point of view , the need in the future is for a more reliable and responsive support network and a wider circle of friends and acquaintances to help them strengthen their hold on , and increase their share of , life in the community .
12 There was an immediate outcry from the women 's movement , particularly women prominent in the so-called ‘ wages for housework ’ campaign that was very active at the time ( Malos , 1980 ) .
13 At Women 's Convenience , A Handbook On The Design Of Women 's Public Toilets , is available from the Women 's Design Service , 18 Ashwin Street , London E8 3DL , price £7 inc p&p .
14 Often seen at press receptions and " at homes " for a client and his products , journalists from the women 's magazines may appear young and rather silly or matronly and gentle .
15 Rather than only recording those instances of violence that the women had reported to official agencies such as the police , they explored a wide range of violent incidents from the women 's points of view .
16 Tea was carried out to us on a brass tray from the women 's quarters .
17 I went round all the hospitals in Edinburgh and Leith all the doctors surgeries and there was nowhere and I ended up at the the women 's unit in Edinburgh City Chambers and I got help from the women 's unit and er from there we started a pressure group to get more literature to people , you know to get them into doctor 's surgeries so as they would know what to do , what to expect .
18 The male washroom , apart from the urinal stalls , differed very little from the women 's .
19 At the time , what can hardly have failed to make a strong impact on the boy were the great ritual events , including the assemblies , which punctuated the life of the court , and which Charles presumably was brought out by his nurse from the women 's quarters to attend : the arrival of envoys from Constantinople at Compiègne in September 827 ; the public deposition from office of Hugh and Matfrid in February 828 ; the reception of the relics of SS Marcellinus and Petrus at Aachen a few weeks later .
20 I do n't I thin I think there 's probably a lot lot less sexism just in terms of I think we 've won their respect by you know and and certainly when th they did n't want us to picket in the beginning , and then over the months really the women have done quite a lot of successful picketing when we 've been asked and and we 've staged quite big pickets quite a lot of you know the big pickets were really organized and the rallies have been organized by us and really sort of quite a lot of the input into into the strike I think has come from the women 's support group in in quite a unique way .
21 I mean the strain on families must be enormous in a strike situation and for both people in the family to be having an input and feeling that they 're getting some sort of feedback from the situation that it 's not just despair must surely you know be you know there 's that side to it and then erm from the women 's point of view I mean we have like I said become one big family in a way you know and the social side of the strike in a way you know people are sa you know going out more maybe and certainly
22 A report from the Women 's Environmental Network ( WEN ) shows that the National Rivers Authority ( NRA ) has brought only five prosecutions against polluting paper mills since 1990 , even though 42 of the country 's 56 mills have broken the law .
23 There will also be sheltered women only workshops and songs from the women 's perspective .
24 It 's interesting that sexuality has been problematised in the seventies and eighties and nineties most effectively by the scholarship emerging from the Women 's Movement erm who 've said that y'know perhaps things are n't quite as equitable as these people have supposed , er perhaps sexuality can be abusive , look at all these instances of rape , of child sex abuse etcetera , sexual harassment and all these kinds of things .
25 The occupational structure of the town can be deduced from the freemen 's registers , for between 1559 and 1603 an average of about twenty men per annum , almost 900 in all , were admitted to the freedom of the city .
26 The experiment was , as might have been predicted from the chairmen 's opposition , a failure .
27 Just like Windsor , volunteers formed a human chain to rescue nearly 200,000 precious items — in this case , books and manuscripts that had to be protected from the firemen 's hoses as well as the flames .
28 Lord Justice Balcombe said it was unlikely that a pending court application by the mother , who is divorced from the children 's father , for access to her children would succeed .
29 If they take place from the children 's earliest years , they 'll be seen as a natural resource in family interactions .
30 He is now living apart from the children 's mother , but can not be named for legal reasons .
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