Example sentences of "to take [noun] from the [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 That can mean only that the common agricultural policy is to be reformed in such a way as to take money from the United Kingdom and give it for cohesion to countries outside .
2 IF I WAS GOING TO take money from the public for the privilege of sampling my cooking , I would do it in a pub .
3 On 21 October a Convention summoned to the Tolbooth in Edinburgh accused Mary of Guise of the fundamental failure to take counsel from the nobility of the realm , something which touched on a very sensitive aristocratic nerve , and with reason .
4 A careful scrutiny of existing policies and their implicit and explicit assumptions should do two things ; it should enable choices to be made at the level of general strategies , as to what is most conducive to equity or equality , it should also enable individual teachers in individual schools to compare their circumstances with those of others and learn which innovations seem to suit what circumstances and to take heart from the struggles and successes of their colleagues .
5 Mr Major asks industry to take heart from the fact that things are quite different now .
6 During March there were violent protests in a number of areas throughout England over the introduction of the community charge or poll tax , which was to take effect from the beginning of the following month in both England and Wales under the terms of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 [ see p. 36501 ] .
7 8.2 To take Lease following disclaimer If at any time during the Term the Tenant ( being an individual ) shall become bankrupt or ( being a company ) shall enter into liquidation and the trustee in bankruptcy or liquidator shall disclaim this Lease the Guarantor shall if the Landlord shall by notice within [ 60 ] days after such disclaimer so require take from the Landlord a Lease of the Premises for the residue of the Contractual Term which would have remained had there been no disclaimer at the Rent then being paid under this Lease and subject to the same covenants and terms as in this Lease ( except that the Guarantor shall not be required to procure that any other person is made a party to the Lease as guarantor ) such new Lease to take effect from the date of such disclaimer and in such case the Guarantor shall pay the costs of such new Lease and execute and deliver to the Landlord a counterpart of it This provision is inserted to avoid the fact that a disclaimer of a lease by a trustee in bankruptcy or a liquidator will give rise to the release of the guarantor from the date of the disclaimer .
8 Unfortunately , Durie woke up and subsequently allowed Paulus to take command from the baseline .
9 Darlington Council is providing a bus service to take visitors from the centre of Darlington to the factory site .
10 We have no need to take lectures from the Opposition , who presided over the slashing of prison building by 29 per cent .
11 We do n't need to see er leaflets and so on urging us into merger before they 're actually ready to take place from the membership itself .
12 Both of them treated the case as one in which there was an implied threat by the defendant to deprive the plaintiff 's clerk of his right to take extracts from the parish register for no charge ; and both appear to have concluded that , in the circumstances , although that threat was made before the plaintiff 's clerk obtained the extracts he needed , nevertheless it was causative of the payment which was therefore recoverable on the ground of compulsion .
13 For a typical candidate , one need look no further than Keith Hill , bidding to take Streatham from the Tories .
14 I started to take things from the house as well , y'know , little things that I thought would n't be noticed .
15 ‘ The case of the customer who simply removes goods from the shelves is of course different because the basis on which a supermarket is run is that customers certainly have the consent of the owner to take goods from the shelves and take them to the checkout point there to pay the proper price for them .
16 Stefan Edberg also dropped a set but his greater consistency and ability to take control from the net allowed him to defeat Brad Gilbert 4–6 , 6–2 , 6–3 .
17 Molly Crook has booked a coach to take people from the Surrey area ( Mordern/Sutton ) .
18 It was all very well for Dawlish to tell me to take orders from the Brain , he did n't have to obey them .
19 In 1746 , for example , William Grant , who in spite of his seemingly humble occupation of carpenter was the son of an Inverness-shire laird , chose a particularly inconvenient moment to take leave from the service of the Hudson 's Bay Company and return to Scotland , for he was promptly committed to prison on suspicion of treason when he reached Scotland during the turmoil occasioned by the Jacobite Rising .
20 She wants to take biscuits from the kitchen but she does n't because she knows she will get into trouble .
21 Moran bought the freehold of the site from the Government four years ago and since then has been involved in delicate and at times heated negotiations to take possession from the leaseholder , an educational charity , the British Federation of University Women .
22 This is one of the few places to take shelter from the streets that was safe to go .
23 I said , with a reasonable show of calmness : ‘ You 're welcome , of course , to take shelter from the storm , but do you usually walk into someone else 's house without knocking ?
24 In his address to the party conference at Brighton , Mr Kinnock said Labour was now ready , eager and able to take power from the Conservatives at the next election , and his confidence won him one of the most prolonged and enthusiastic ovations received by a Labour leader for many years .
  Next page