Example sentences of "from [art] [adv] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Beryl 's collecting up some toilet rolls from the up St Meringer for two P .
2 The spectra of show a very pronounced intensification of the bands due to ionization from the predominantly metal-d orbitals of t 2g symmetry at photon energies that appear to correspond to absorptions in the high energy electronic spectra [ 16 ] .
3 Apart from the on/off switch , there are just seven controls covering mainly standard play and track skip functions ; the remote control adds audible cueing and a random access ( numeric ) track keypad to the total .
4 I hope all of you know or have met this good friend of the Hundred I 'm sure that most of you have and he has with him today a guest from Germany , Herr and his charming daughter er and Mr was a member of the and has provided invaluable information here , who as you know is doing a , a comprehensive book on the monster mission and in commemoration of what we have done today , we have a letter addressed to er the Hundredth Bomb Group Memorial Association U K , from the Most Reverend Doctor the Bishop of Munster which I would like to read to you .
5 In one sense Japanese subcontractors are being pushed away from the most labour intensive processes where overseas plants have the advantage .
6 Our Fish of the Week contest offers superb prizes from the best selling DAM range and it 's easy to enter .
7 Moving away from the mainly blood and guts stuff , this is a more involved horror thriller which should help expand his market .
8 However , the space seems to have been taken from the back seats which are very cramped for adults but fine for children .
9 Landscapes from the truly realist to the virtually abstract array themselves across the May gallery horizon .
10 But er their , their real function is , is to fight ; the whole thing is about turtle power , and er their , their main theme song says ‘ we 're a fierce fighting team ’ , and er so you , you see a change from the quite sort of innocent er appearance to suddenly er a lot of aggression .
11 This will usually have sufficient sensitivity to provide ample volume from the 20 to 100mV output signal obtained from the a.m. tuner .
12 From the purely cricket point of view , Pakistan will remember Aamir Sohail 's double-century .
13 It has staged a remarkable recovery from the apparently moribund state of the late fifties and early sixties .
14 In this case , however , methodological issues are tackled from a largely user standpoint , whereas in the previous part they were viewed as substantive problems in their own right .
15 In a lecture that I gave in Rome I tried to show that in spite of what Thomas Kuhn says ( which has been much exaggerated by his followers ) , you can not write the history of any branch of knowledge , whatever it may be , from a completely relativist point of view .
16 Ensuring that private practitioners take on preventive activities and promote healthy behaviour by their patients requires a substantial move away from a strictly market led approach .
17 The company 's overwhelmingly American board of directors and senior management still suffer from a not-invented-here arrogance .
18 In 1970 , he refused to vote Labour from a frankly ultra-leftist position .
19 As an established ‘ national ’ institution the BBC head of sport claims ‘ we do n't approach life from a purely business point of view ’ .
20 His particular desire had been to widen pupils ' science learning from a mainly laboratory and experimental base towards other methods of enquiry .
21 Patrick told me that he was a little worried about the brightness in tone that would inevitably result from a totally maple body and so he suggested to Jim Sullivan that actives might well hold the answer .
22 ‘ We were thinking of having the party on New Year 's Eve , ’ said Miranda , spraying fake snow from an ozonefriendly aerosol on to a twig of holly .
23 Despite their independent nature , they quickly become a pleasant distraction from an otherwise plastic world .
24 Doubts as to even the possible reality of such a law , arising from an excessively empiricist conception of the possibilities of being , prove unreasonable in the light of the establishable fact that both the every day world in which we live , and we ourselves , are only appearances of a realm of things in themselves whose true nature is hidden from us. for this opens the possibility that what we are in ourselves is essentially rational beings , belonging to a society of rational beings , while what we are as appearances is sensory beings .
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