Example sentences of "from its [adj] day " in BNC.

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1 One stream is made up of those whose families have belonged to the church from its earliest days and who themselves have known no other spiritual home .
2 Consequently , from its earliest days the service had a strong welfare orientation .
3 Users fall into various categories : firms can keep up-to-date with the latest developments in their line of business and the indexes also provide the means to check on the activities of competitors ; researchers in academic and other institutions similarly can check progress in their particular speciality ; students of the history of technology , and industrial archaeologists can follow the gradual development of an industry of science from its earliest days .
4 As well as the world famous Boot and Shoe Collection , the Museum also includes fine collections of ceramics and paintings , and the two history galleries , ‘ Hamtun ’ and ‘ Shoe Town — New Town ’ , recreate the town 's past , from its earliest days to modern times .
5 From its earliest days it has been the target of media vilification for its gay programming .
6 Instead it was named " Stockport School " , thus using one of the names which had been applied to Sir Edmond 's Foundation , probably from its earliest days , though the first written reference dates only from 1597 .
7 Lee , a key figure not only within the Association since its foundation , but also with the Dictionary of National Biography from its earliest days , referred to the aims of the English Association , suggesting " that English be the constant , the unresting ally and companion of whatever other studies the call of national enlightenment and national efficiency may prescribe " .
8 They thereby avoid a circularity of reasoning which has plagued the natural rate-NAIRU literature from its earliest days : if a sustained rise in the unemployment rate is not accompanied by an abatement of inflationary pressure , then this literature can admit of only one explanation — that NAIRU , a concept which has often been conflated with that of the natural unemployment rate , must itself have risen .
9 It is true that Sassoon was prominent member from its early days , but the PPU was in fact founded by Dick Sheppard in 1934 .
10 Charleton was involved from its early days with the subject of the next chapter , The Royal Society of London for the Improving of Natural Knowledge .
11 Some Conservative support for the BUF was evident from its early days and was most obviously stated through Rothermere 's Daily Mail which , on 8 January 1934 , contained an article entitled ‘ Hurrrah for the Blackshirts ’ .
12 All the various units that have used Woodvale are described , from its early days with Spitfires of 308 Squadron to Liverpool University Air Squadron who currently use the airfield with their Bulldog T.1s .
13 From its early days , broadcasting was therefore seen to be a legitimate field of public policy and its development was shaped by periodic government inquiries .
14 These edited highlights of the symposium provide an historical insight into the Survey , from its early days to the ‘ Consumption Revolution ’ .
15 Whilst there is no denying that from its early days the Castro government provided safe haven and some aid to the revolutionary groups which flocked to Havana from all over Latin America and the Caribbean — in 1959 Cuba was the launching base for unsuccessful attacks on Haiti , Panama and the Dominican Republic — these activities must be set in context .
16 Fishlock took a candid historical look at Sellafield from its early days when it was ‘ a motley collection of stained concrete hulks ’ .
17 Additional competition comes in the form of the recently-opened Atrium Bookshop in nearby Cork Street , partly staffed and run by former St George 's personnel from its pre-oriental days .
18 Compiled by Paul Wiggins , the book charts the life of this Scottish airfield , from its military days with the RAF and its Battles , Beauforts , Beaufighters , Dakotas , Hurricanes and Oxfords , post-war sporadic scheduled civilian airline services of BEA , Silver City , Autair et al , to the present day when as ‘ Carlisle Airport ’ the airfield serves the needs of the local community .
19 The Dorset industry must have continued from its Pre-conquest days up to the moment of expansion ; its potters had been supplying the army in the middle of the first century , as is evident from Waddon Hill ( Webster , 1960 , 93 , 95 ; 1965 , 142 ) .
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