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

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1 A rich variety of attractions exist throughout the area ; from the internationally famous Fleet Air Arm Museum at Yeovilton to the renowned Cricket St Thomas Wildlife Park near Chard .
2 A striking exception from the internationally acknowledged ‘ death line ’ for the occurrence of natural gas fields ( commonly assumed at 3.0–3.5% Rm ) is represented by the gas field Uchte where the vitrinite reflectance is 4.5% Rm at the surface of the Carboniferous .
3 From the later seventh century B.C. the Greeks colonized Sicily and southern Italy but it was the Etruscans who introduced a high culture to the central area of the peninsular .
4 An example from the later fifth century is illustrated in fig. 166 .
5 Flexible though the Formalist/Prague School approach may be in this respect , it still attaches overwhelming importance to the element of innovation in literature , thus reflecting the permanent revolution in poetic language , and in literary forms in general , brought about by the modernist movement from the later nineteenth century onwards .
6 From the later fourth century , this ideal offered puzzled Christians a means to define their identity without ambiguity .
7 With the introduction of steam power from the later eighteenth century , the necessity for a streamside location disappeared and , particularly in regard to cotton spinning , a climate of high humidity became a more important requirement .
8 Princeton University Press is offering Fields of Vision : Landscape Imagery and National Identity in England and the United States by Stephen Daniels ( £32.25 , $45 ) , in which the author explores the ways in which artists from the later eighteenth century to the present day have used landscape as a way of embodying their national feelings , and how painters like Turner and Constable contributed to a ‘ myth ’ of national identity .
9 Pitchford is one of England 's most important timber-framed houses , dating from the later sixteenth century and in the same family since 1473 .
10 Its importance was institutionalised in the emergence from the later sixteenth century onwards in many states of officials whose duty it was to supervise the reception of foreign diplomatic representatives and smooth out differences between them on questions of ceremonial and precedence .
11 Workshops may have existed , as Dickinson suggests , from the later sixth century , but this need not affect any argument regarding the method of manufacture .
12 From the later sixth century they are characterised by features of maenadism as actually practised : the ‘ wing-dance ’ here , and the thyrsus ( a bunch of ivy-leaves tied to a fennel-stalk ) , as in fig. 104 , from a picture of the Death of Pentheus by the Kleophrades Painter 's great rival the Berlin Painter .
13 enrolment rates for primary education are decreasing further from the already low level of 47 per cent in 1986/7 as parents keep their children out of school for lack of money to pay for school books , etc ; and
14 By reducing the need to handle a complicated system , time is released from the already tight schedules for pupils to develop skills through a process whereby creative association and opportunities to learn and think are highly valued .
15 Helen Cam once suggested that parliamentary petitions may have sprung from the already practised art of the clergy in drafting lists of gravamina , or grievances , which at intervals since 1237 they had submitted to the king for redress ; but G. O. Sayles traces the origin more directly to the legal procedure of bills of complaint submitted to the king 's itinerant justices , and certainly the character of the early parliamentary petitions seems to bear this out : clerical gravamina were corporate complaints directed against general practices rather than particular people and they lacked the specific quality which individual parliamentary petitions naturally displayed .
16 The gaoler was appointed , made his living as best as he could from bribes , favours , anxious relatives and profits from the already meagre food allocation — and was allowed to get on with it .
17 Disposable society : So why do we still hear clamour from the environmentally conscious that plastics represent everything bad in our disposable society ?
18 Their financial status seems to have varied at different times in her life from the reasonably comfortable to the distinctly shabby genteel .
19 The Northern public-sector schools come from the partly voluntary system of pre-Partition .
20 The first comes from the artificially high return on capital .
21 Away from the slightly protected environment of her parents ' home , Dawn 's return to independent life was complete .
22 From the slightly twee to the almost risqué . ’
23 Differs from the slightly larger Sooty Gull , with which it hardly overlaps , in its black head and throat , white ring round white eye , paler breast , longer and slenderer black-tipped red bill and yellow legs .
24 Its only drawback , apart from the slightly adulterated styling , is that the Carrera 4 is not as much fun to drive hard as the old 911 .
25 Harper , interestingly , chose to interpolate the scherzo from the slightly later but equally God-given String Octet .
26 In any case , she was completely different from the generously curved blondes Nathan Bryce was usually seen with .
27 But it 's quite different from the unpleasantly lazy speech that you get now , for instance , Lancashire i it 's
28 Instantly , she was filled with the need to protect herself from the hopelessly vulnerable way that made her feel .
29 ‘ I lifted it out onto the pathway and had quite a job to prise the frog from the seemingly lifeless fish . ’
30 From the seemingly endless stable of ambitious and extraordinary projects from the Scottish Chamber Orchestra comes Rites .
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