Example sentences of "move away [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 A move away from the preceding year basis of assessment is long overdue and should be welcomed by all .
2 She was left alone for some time , but did n't dare move away from the tall candlestick and the rubber dildo .
3 European pistes are becoming more and more overcrowded and there is a move away from the endless queues for the ski-lifts .
4 The separation of these various powers between three officers has been criticised as likely to lead to a confusion of managerial authority ( Leach 1989:118 ) , and certainly it represents a move away from the chief executive model advocated in the Bains Report .
5 The above considerations are simply meant to signal my conviction that a change of balance is desirable , with a move away from the narrow professionalism of the academy , and a modest return to the original motives of the discipline of English .
6 There has been a move away from the narrow field of Production Engineering into the broader field of Operations Management … .
7 The suggestion is that there needs to be a move away from the narrow professionalism of the past towards a more generalised and politically aware professionalism .
8 The major changes in other branches of archaeology , particularly prehistory , which resulted from the development of independent dating techniques , has stimulated a move away from the mere grouping of artefacts to represent ‘ cultures ’ using typologies , in part , to provide the time scale , with varying degrees of success .
9 The most significant aspect of the New Historicism , political questions apart , is that it represents a move away from the contextless , intensive concentration on particular texts equally characteristic of the New Criticism , classical structuralism , and deconstruction .
10 These groups are trained for a more aggressive role in crowd control , and represent a significant move away from the traditional approach to public order policing which was based on containment and the use of minimum force .
11 This involves a move away from the traditional form of centralised bureaucratic administration and will inevitably meet with resistance from those at the centre who seek control .
12 This move away from the traditional specialisation which was a feature of local government , has meant that generic workers need to develop financial skills and take responsibility for budgets .
13 He stood for a move away from the traditional Democratic identification with " big government " and their vote-losing image as high taxers .
14 Mr Shuker wants students of all ages and backgrounds to have access to courses at times which suit them and to see a move away from the traditional September to June academic year .
15 This implies a different role for local government — almost an echo of the Bains Report quoted earlier — with a move away from the direct delivery of services as a dominant activity , even if the bulk of the spending is still in that area , towards the management of change , in this case , economic change .
16 $8,000 million and marking a move away from the expansive defence White Paper of 1987 .
17 It may be unwise , however , to suggest the move away from the large , printer-prepared guide was determined by financial factors , because if this was the reason the saving was not achieved .
18 Counselling requires , however , a move away from the authoritarian model of distance , diagnosis , and reassurance towards a model that recognises and promotes a person 's autonomy .
19 Although a more general move away from the indigenous Gothic style of architecture and church design only began in earnest a century later after the Restoration , the trend was signalled as early as the 1630s with the construction of St Paul 's , Covent Garden .
20 Ever since the Second World War , there had been pressure in some circles for a move away from the secular aspects of the state created between the wars by Ataturk .
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