Example sentences of "the [noun pl] emerge from " in BNC.
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1 | From the Treaty of Berlin onwards , the states emerging from the Ottoman Empire were theoretically , though not very successfully , demarcated by nationality . |
2 | And now the states emerging from the Soviet empire are opening up new markets for him : ‘ Suddenly there are 17 or so more countries all wanting their own national stamps , ’ he said . |
3 | Liberation Theology , therefore , advocates action and exhorts the clergy to emerge from the cloisters to help the people to help themselves . |
4 | As a result , many of the films emerging from Rank were of poor quality . |
5 | It is significant that one of the figures to emerge from this period , the poet Valentin Vodnik ( 1759–1819 ) , wrote poems in praise of Napoleon . |
6 | In truth , though , like the punks and skins , the casuals emerged from the dole queues and football terraces , from the ‘ delinquent ’ world of drugs and brawls and menace . |
7 | The changes emerging from the Community Care legislation in the United Kingdom , like other countries , can be conceived of as constituting in general terms a move from institution based care , an accompanying move to enhance home-based care and the development of improved mechanisms of co-ordination and enhanced case management ( Challis , 1992a ) . |
8 | Legislation in the nineteenth-century Russian Empire looks like a series of royal fiats , but the laws whch freed the serfs emerged from a process which the tsar barely understood and over which he had only partial control . |
9 | In the 1890s the Kaszubians emerged from the fog of feudal serfdom and manorial labour . |
10 | The process for organising these courses involves detailed discussions with core groups of interested people , and the courses emerge from their concerns and interests . |
11 | The number of eighteen-year-olds seeking further and higher education is currently on the decline , at the same time as more of the graduates emerging from university are non-cognate ; thus a balance is being held but at the expense of ‘ RICS students ' . |
12 | One by one the men emerged from the huts or appeared among the trees on the top of the bank . |
13 | One can see the publishers emerging from that smoke-filled room , slapping each other on the back : ‘ Baby , we not only have a trilogy here , we have a thesaurus . ’ |
14 | Other experiences of the police emerged from follow up questions to perception of the police . |
15 | The children emerged from the elaborate wrought-iron school gates , which were red with rust-preventer but had never got around to being painted . |
16 | The adults emerge from the soil in May and June — hence the common name ‘ May Bug ’ when they at once attack open blossoms of many kinds . |
17 | This computational approach has proved exceptionally useful in illuminating many of the findings emerging from the experimental literature . |
18 | They had given the boy the surname Ward , not because it was his name — few of the boys emerging from the Clay possessed even the concept of a family name — but because all those who graduated from the Project bore that name . |
19 | A general feeling of pessimism over the future of the talks emerged from a meeting in Tunis on Nov. 21-23 between Palestine Liberation Organization ( PLO ) leaders and members of the Palestinian negotiating team . |
20 | One of the benefits to emerge from the recent recession is that all the players in management buy-outs — vendors , management teams , financial backers and advisers — are far more experienced and sophisticated in their approach . |
21 | The tendency for psychiatric disorders to show up more dramatically as the victims emerged from childhood helped to shift the focus of RCM counselling . |