Example sentences of "[noun] itself from " in BNC.

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1 Thus the Gowers of Stittenham ( Yorks. ) served the lord of nearby Sheriff Hutton , although they held Stittenham itself from the prior of Malton .
2 Thus the Gowers of Stittenham ( Yorks. ) served the lord of nearby Sheriff Hutton , although they held Stittenham itself from the prior of Malton .
3 It may take innumerable forms , such as scratching the panel of a coach , removing a tyre from a car , or the car itself from a garage , or , in the case of animals , beating or killing them .
4 She ran for her life , never seeing the figure detach itself from the wall , as she did in that far off childhood nightmare .
5 He could see a figure within the Lift detach itself from the group and glance quickly in his direction .
6 This not only brought it into harmony with the existing regime , but also enabled it to further dissociate itself from its Judaic origins .
7 Sun will be manufacturing the boards itself from now on .
8 Now I remember you quite strongly disagreed with the notion that in fact if you do n't know behaviour itself from w our own experiences , we behave differently in different situa in very similar situations and it 's based on our interpretation of the stimulus .
9 And Japanese fishermen would pay huge sums for a tortoiseshell tom , to keep as a ship 's cat , for it was thought it would protect the crew from the ghosts of their ancestors and the vessel itself from storms .
10 ‘ The IAC consider it damaging for the Labour Party to regard the SDLP as their equivalent in Northern Ireland and the IAC believe the Party should distance itself from the SDLP . ’
11 Elliott agreed to mount the operation and , as is often the custom with intelligence agencies when engaged in hazardous operations , decided to use a freelance agent so that , if anything went wrong , MI6 could distance itself from the affair and deny any knowledge of it .
12 Even before 1985 , Pacepa 's defection and still more the growing criticism of Ceauşescu 's human rights record in Congress made the United States government distance itself from him .
13 Much as CND may distance itself from these groups , its rhetoric and practice of opposition is an open invitation for their malign political presence .
14 The result , the result of such claims will be a rush to restore differentials and a general inflation in Local Authorities , with no increase in value of services for the community and I ask that the Labour Party should distance itself from this very mis-guided proposal for national wage proposals , minimum national wage proposals .
15 the moon itself from
16 Criticism of the Irish constitution itself from both clergy and laity produced one first change in the constitution .
17 One had been an Egyptian , who had tried to keep alive the Egyptian Aten religion when it looked like disappearing in Egypt itself from about the year 1315 B.C. He had chosen the Jews in Egypt as a people to whom he would teach this religion .
18 The question of the birth rate was to be more crucial in the years after the Education Act , in the debates around the Royal Commission on Population , which reported in 1948–49 , but the existence of the commission itself from 1943 demonstrates public and official concern with such ideas in the first few years of the war .
19 Conviction oozes from every sentence like the very ichor of life itself from the metal life-support systems of the Bronze Giant of Fangorak .
20 Up to the sky itself from which the sun and moon and stars shine upon this earth .
21 This released a cocktail of dust and chemicals into the atmosphere , destroying the nitrous oxides which under normal conditions help protect the ozone layer itself from destruction .
22 We are not talking about whether one can appreciate the city of York itself from here .
23 There was subordination , but not a complete fusion ; for Bacon was perfectly aware of subject boundaries , differentiating mathematics itself from grammar , perspective , experimental science , and moral philosophy .
24 It seems ironic that where , in the eighteenth century , novelists and architects alike look out of their elegant windows on to the cottages of the poor as pleasing little features in the landscape , the Victorians , for whom the dwellings of the middle class tended increasingly to set the standard , should view the great house itself from that perspective — from the outside , as the focus for a landscape , much as the eighteenth-century painters had done ( Fig. 24 ) .
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