Example sentences of "be deduce from [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 What can be deduced from a single skull
2 A subsidy assessment of £40 suggests that this completes the account of his lands ; any there might have been in other counties can not be deduced from the available evidence .
3 Some of the nursing activities which might be relevant can be deduced from the following discussion , which is based on the reports of two studies of accidents in hospital .
4 For a single inductor or capacitor of negligible loss , the latter being more common , the inductance or capacitance can be deduced from the measured impedance provided that the frequency of the current is known .
5 The basic pull-out torque/speed characteristic in this region can be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristic and the relationship between the two characteristics is discussed in the next section .
6 Under these conditions the pull-out torque of the motor can be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristics for the particular excitation scheme .
7 Since this torque may be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristic , using the methods described in Chapter 4 , the magnet flux ( M ) can be found in terms of the peak static torque .
8 At low operating speeds the optimum detected position can be deduced from the static torque/rotor position characteristic for the excitation scheme being employed .
9 Questions were asked after each problem , and at the completion of the task , to obtain the following objective information : 1 ) the ease of use of each program , 2 ) the insight gained from using each technique , 3 ) the aid given by each technique in attaining a solution , 4 ) the user preference , and dislike , for the techniques , 5 ) the technique thought to be most capable of giving insight , 6 ) the technique thought to be most capable of giving the best design , and 7 ) the subject 's engineering and computing background , and knowledge of the polar second moment of area ; this being the sectional properties of a component that allows the shearing stresses to be deduced from the applied torque .
10 Leaf c i /c a can be deduced from the above equation when p 13 C and a 13 C are known .
11 However , the labels for the symmetry species depend on the point group , and may be deduced from the appropriate character table .
12 Held , that , since in Part III of the Insolvency Act 1986 there was no definition of ‘ company ’ in relation to administrative receivers , by virtue of section 251 of that Act the definition in section 735 of the Companies Act 1985 applied and , therefore , unless the contrary intention appeared , ‘ company ’ was to be defined as a company registered under the Companies Acts ; but that a contrary intention was to be deduced from the proper construction of the provisions relating to administrative receivers generally and the Act of 1986 as a whole , whereby it appeared that Parliament intended that ‘ company , ’ in the context of section 29(2) ( a ) , should not be confined to the prima facie meaning of companies registered under the Companies Acts but should embrace unregistered companies liable to be wound up under Part V of the Act of 1986 ; and that , accordingly , the applicants were administrative receivers within the meaning of section 29(2) ( post , pp. 243F–G , 244A–C , D–G , 245F — 246A ) .
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