Example sentences of "released from the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 When a vase emerged unbroken — especially the tall storage amphorae for oil and water-when its millennia-old husk of mud and chalk was scraped away , it appeared to Davide like a living body released from the torpor of an unnatural sleep , from a kind of illness , its rounded shape tender , pointing a foot , like an absorbed peg-doll , its intactness a triumphant resurrection .
2 I am released from the gravity of routine , light-headed in the thin air at the top of the building .
3 It was exhilarating too , as though possibility had suddenly been released from the grip of necessity and we could imagine the world we wanted .
4 The aircraft is released from the trolley by a semi-automatic system ( manual command , only obeyed if certain safety parameters are within limits ) .
5 The Self or Ātman , released from the bonds of darkness and ignorance or avidyā , is at one with God , and when this unity is realized by means of prayer , bhakti or devotion is transformed into jñāna or knowledge .
6 During the mid 1970s , it was suggested that the increased use of nitrogen-based agricultural fertilizers and/or nitrogen-fixing vegetation might affect the nitrogen cycle and result in an increase in the amounts of oxides of nitrogen released from the surface into the atmosphere .
7 The protein is then released from the agarose by adding a salty solution , he said .
8 Later , released from the spell of that voice , she was plagued by niggling incredulity .
9 Also disappointed were Rev Ian Paisley 's Democratic Unionists , who , despite being released from the constraints of an earlier pact with the Ulster Unionists of James Molyneaux , secured only 13.1 per cent ( retaining three seats ) , against 34.5 ( and nine seats ) for the UUP .
10 Released from the constraints of both shareholders and any market , managers are free to become public servants , ‘ a purely neutral technocracy , balancing a variety of claims by various groups in the community and assigning to each a portion of the income stream on the basis of public policy rather than private cupidity ’ .
11 They are , in fact , the beaches of ice-drained lakes left behind by successive falls in the glacier as it melted and was released from the valley at the end of the Ice Age .
12 He says that certain morphine like substances are released from the brain during acupuncture .
13 ‘ She was released from the unit into a bed-sit , where she lived totally alone .
14 ‘ They still remain chaste and celibate but they are released from the vows of poverty . ’
15 Thus pan-PLA2 , which is readily released from the pancreas into blood in acute pancreatitis , circulatesmostly as inactive enzyme .
16 Nigel Mansell is one example , though Mansell 's metabolism , once released from the horrors of his competitive life , seems to revert to such extreme placidity that it is possible to picture him living out his days as a happy family man and manager of his own investments .
17 In his catalogue introduction Kudielka describes Bridget Riley walking on the hillside in the hour before dusk when the colours are released from the domination of the sun .
18 Released from the confinement of their workplace , the workers are offered a global view of their oppressive working conditions .
19 This is the mid-Sixties , and homosexuals are being released from the closet by a law enacted by Parliament late in the novel .
20 Unemployed Wisdom Smith , 19 , and student Daniel Winter , 19 , were released from the dock at Bristol Crown Court on the seventh day of their trial after a jury returned formal verdicts on the judge 's direction .
21 Unemployed Wisdom Smith , 19 , and student Daniel Winter , 19 , were released from the dock at Bristol Crown Court on the seventh day of their trial after a jury returned formal not guilty verdicts on the direction of the judge .
22 Unemployed Wisdom Smith , 19 , and student Daniel Winter , 19 , were released from the dock at Bristol Crown Court on the seventh day of their trial after a jury returned formal verdicts on the direction of the judge .
23 The gradual acceptance of the Darwinian evolutionary philosophy , that enables us to accept each species in its own right and see its actions from its own point of view , has meant that we are released from the burden of interpreting everything animals do in terms of good and evil .
24 The premium charged by the Roman Catholic church orphanage was nearly £50 and Lily was required to pay it back at 10/ a month until , in 1931 , she was finally released from the burden of payment .
25 Sydney had some way to go before it was released from the burden of compulsive immigration , and before it could present to the world a face that was uniquely its own .
26 Although I agree with the Minister that empty properties could be used to house homeless people , is not it the case that until capital receipts are released from the sale of council properties , councils will not have the resources to put properties back into use for people who need them ?
27 The Attorney-General was joined as a respondent to the application because he had declined to grant his fiat under section 13 of the Coroners Act 1988 , but at the hearing he was released from the proceedings with the consent of all parties .
28 Over the next seven years , as some £1,000 million of this is released from the Fund for the Bank of Savings ( a national fund in which TSB deposits have hitherto been placed , taking them out of TSB control ) , the TSB 's predominantly working-class customers should gain relatively easy access to an attractively-priced new source of credit .
29 If he is sad , then his art expresses a sadness , as Ivy Campbell-Fisher ( 1950 ) puts it , ‘ released from the entanglement of contingency ’ ( p. 267 ) .
30 For example , sadness felt within a ritual could also be an emotion ‘ released from the entanglement of contingency ’ .
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