Example sentences of "to move from [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Yorkshire coast supermarket chain Proudfoot Ltd is set to move from its current South Cliff site to a purpose-built £1.5m new headquarters on the outskirts of Scarborough .
2 How about the BMA really setting the government an example by ( a ) encouraging all its disabled staff to register as disabled with guarantees of no discrimination , and ( b ) taking prompt action to move from its current level of 1.5% of workforce disabled , towards the 3% target as laid out in the 1944 Disabled Persons Employment Act ?
3 In the meantime , the Board is looking for ways to fund the deficit should it continue , but has decided not to charge the deficit as an additional burden upon those residents who are able to pay their own way from their own resources , and not to move from its established principle of offering care to those most in need towards a degenerate policy of offering care only to those who are most able to pay .
4 Nijman Zeetank 's UK director Clive Riggall said the company wanted to move from its former Lincoln base to the North west as one of its major customers was Pilkington Glass , based in St Helens .
5 It was he who , as we shall see , ultimately replaced George Lansbury as the leader of the party with Attlee and who got the Labour Party to move from its general support of peace and pacifism towards the need to prepare to meet the threat of war with European fascism .
6 These will define the behaviours which a child must learn in order to move from her existing pattern of responses to those described in the teaching objectives .
7 The upper levels of the water will be inhabited by three Tinfoil Barbs which I need to move from their present home .
8 Later in the day she was busy again when the Intelligence Officer informed her that it had become necessary for a UDR soldier and his family to move from their present house .
9 Criticism of the retraining schemes is often that they train people for jobs that are not always available to them and they expect too much mobility from people who have further reasons , in their disability , for being reluctant to move from their familiar surroundings .
10 SINCE 1991 , unit trust managers have been able to move from their traditional equity gilt and money market funds into the worlds of property and the mysteriously named warrants , futures and options .
11 Changes in climate may have forced the hominoids to move from their earlier forest habitat into open country and to eat flesh to survive .
12 Just as in his rotation of Party officials to areas with which they had no connection and where they would have difficulty building up a power-base , so now Ceauşescu was transferring people into new places of work , forcing them to move from their old homes .
13 and that the reverse would be the case if we were to move from our free enterprise and initiative policy to a policy whereby state nationalisation took over Northern Electric in York , Yorkshire Water , British Telecom and other similar companies ?
14 What er encouraged you to move from your first shop t t t t t t t to Valley Stores ?
15 Emerging from a tent at 6.30 in the morning , desperate for the toilet , but too cold and stiff to move from your reeking sleeping-bag , the last thing you need to deal with is a hangover .
16 A flow of love and light and warmth seemed to move from his hard nearness into her own body .
17 What steps are reasonable in any particular case will obviously depend on the circumstances in which the policeman ( or the citizen ) finds himself , but these might include requiring trespassers to leave , requiring a speaker to move from his chosen spot , or to desist from speaking altogether , calling for quiet when noise seems likely to provoke a breach of the peace ; in short , anything that is necessary to prevent the breach from occurring .
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