Example sentences of "could [verb] from [art] " in BNC.

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1 Contrasted in this way it seems improbable that madness and creativity could spring from the same source .
2 He had not been able to deal so skilfully with his own wife , however , that relationship needing more of himself than he could spare from the animals , and she had left him many years ago .
3 I contacted their next-of-kin and I undertook to pass on any scraps of information , or even rumour , that I could glean from every possible source .
4 The World Wide Fund for Nature ( WWF ) is calling for a 40 per cent cut in North Sea fishing fleets in order to conserve fish stocks , particularly those of cod and haddock , which it warns could disappear from the area within five years if present catch rates continue .
5 This fabulous resort , a mere twenty minutes from the recently-opened Holdana International Airport , offers you everything you could want from a holiday — and more !
6 A taut fusion of garrotted guitars , drum machine dynamics and half-hidden melodies , this is a spectacular , sensual starting point with slow bits and crazed barrages and everything else anyone could want from a slab of noise terrorism .
7 There was everything that you particularly could want from a grand piano to a pin sold in Main Street .
8 ‘ Pugna pro patria ’ , ‘ Fight for your country ’ , was a call which Bishop Brinton could make from the pulpit in the 1370s .
9 This is indeed ‘ a relatively radical conclusion ’ , for it removes one of the most important gains which could arise from an integration of Freud 's theory with sociology as such .
10 He failed to show how from the other direction values could arise from the people and become incorporated in the state ideology .
11 The league programme had not been free from the upsets that could arise from the organizational confusion of most Edwardian football clubs .
12 In Italy integration was viewed as a counterbalance to the possible domestic instability that could arise from the presence of a large and hostile Communist Party .
13 And at the end of the day quite considerable potential changes could arise from the results that you might deduce .
14 Marketing activity is being targeted on central and eastern Europe and the Company considering setting up an office in Seoul to take advantage of new business opportunities which could arise from the signing of a bilateral agreement between the UK and Korean Governments .
15 A second difficulty could arise from the Labour Party rule ( again dating from 1981 ) that a Leader in office as Prime Minister can be challenged for the Leadership at a Party conference if an election is requested by a majority of the conference on a card vote .
16 This could range from a small lightweight kite to fly on a single line , through to a four-line aerobatic kite .
17 Theoretically , the company 's total valuation , based on estimated 1992 revenues of $90m , could range from a low of $270m to a high of $720m , but more probably lies around $500m give or take .
18 Either the debtor or the creditor could appeal from the decision of the court to a single-judge Court of Appeal which gave a final decision .
19 Er is what you 're saying , what , what you 're saying apply equally erm spitting rather , if I sort information from it , I 'm not quite sure what sort information I could seek from a commission , got any suggestions in that
20 Anyone could fall from a cliff , even great ladies …
21 There is still a possibility the club could resign from the Northern League before Tuesday 's deadline .
22 The first contract contemplated the creation of sub-sales — so that the seller could predict from the outset that in the event of non-delivery the buyer might suffer loss in connection with sub-sales .
23 Ideally , both father and son should attend so that they could discuss from a common base .
24 Ledeen always thought it self-evident that America should re-open contacts with Iran ; it could profit from the political fissures there , and could perhaps exploit the chaos that would undoubtedly follow the end of the Ayatollah 's rule .
25 The Hadow Report of 1926 , and its successor the Spens Report of 1938 , had envisaged that not all children would want or could profit from the kind of schooling which was available in Cardiff in the 1930s or in Thame in the 1890s , and that different kinds of pupils deserved not only various curricula but also distinctive types of school .
26 Some schools in affluent industrial districts could profit from the scheme while those in rural areas with few companies nearby would have little chance of extra support .
27 Schönhuber manoeuvred around the ‘ old Nazi ’ tag , while making plain that not only was he proud to have been in the Waffen SS , but that there was indeed something worthwhile that Germans could salvage from the Nazi era .
28 It was the only crumb of comfort he could salvage from the ordeal .
29 Well I could speak from a personal experience .
30 The Exeter district , now free from the shackles of the Devon area authority , could negotiate from a stronger management position with the ‘ receiver ’ districts .
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