Example sentences of "[noun] have emerge from " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | What is new is that the personnel involved in this work have emerged from the different backgrounds of teaching , educational research and libraries , bringing with them expertise and specialist knowledge from these different areas . |
2 | The hope must be that both bodies have emerged from the fire hardened in their dealings with other regulatory bodies on behalf of the City and the country . |
3 | The race through the streets of Phoenix is not a useful guide to a car 's potential on more conventional circuits , but the US Grand Prix did prove that McLaren and Honda have emerged from the winter stronger than ever . |
4 | Broad themes have emerged from these studies which social workers may find helpful to bear in mind . |
5 | Conflicting pictures of IBM UK 's environmental performance have emerged from two separate green audits . |
6 | Few autobiographies have emerged from the City compared with other walks of life . |
7 | Millions of tiny polyps have emerged from their limestone cells to stretch out their minuscule arms and grope for food . |
8 | Most of the streamlined , designed-to-appeal policies which appear to have impressed voters have emerged from a Review Group headed by Tom Sawyer , chairman of the Labour Party and deputy general secretary of the National Union of Public Employees . |
9 | Similar reports have emerged from Germany , Czechoslovakia and the UK , where once-common mushroom species such as the cep have disappeared from all but the more remote regions . |
10 | A large number of schemes have emerged from various right-wing ‘ think-tanks ’ . |
11 | This type of observation suggests , perhaps , that the most accurate commentaries on the urban disturbances have emerged from those adopting positions somewhere between neo-Marxist interpretations and the central reformist tradition ( Rex , 1982 ) . |
12 | These practices have emerged from the fact that natural language indexing is often not adequate , as discussed in Chapter 12 . |
13 | She has watched and sighed at the conveyor belt of busted rackets and aspirations — as successive decades of dewy-eyed schoolgirls have emerged from the manicured suburban court retreats in the romantic search for more than strawberries at Wimbledon . |
14 | She has watched and sighed at the conveyor belt of busted rackets and aspirations — as successive decades of dewy-eyed schoolgirls have emerged from the manicured suburban court retreats in the romantic search for more than strawberries at Wimbledon . |