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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ( 10 ) A synthesising question a question that pulls the questioning process together , and allows for a resolution of the problem , e.g. " Write an account of the Battle of Hastings from the viewpoint of either Bishop Odo or Harold 's standard bearer . "
2 In the Parliament of 1679 he voted against the exclusion of the Duke of York from the throne .
3 The remaining two divisions did involve a significant breach of party lines — the division over the disqualification of the Duke of Queensberry from voting in the election of Scottish representative peers in 1709 , and the division on the motion disabling the Duke of Hamilton as an hereditary British peer in 1711 .
4 Sir : If , after the return of the Archbishop of Canterbury from Rome , the Church of England , without the concurrence of the Orthodox churches and of the Church of Rome , alters the nature of the Sacred Ministry , which we claim to hold in common with them , it will behave as a sect and will become a sect .
5 It was a decision which he regretted for some years , although within the university he proved an effective teacher and he was dean of the faculty of science from 1894 until 1913 .
6 Included in these publications are records of the removal of radiocaesium from beef cattle , rats and goats and lambs .
7 Lord Denning 's views on the liberation of the Court of Appeal from the obligation to follow its own previous decisions were crushingly rebuffed in Davis v Johnson ( [ 1979 ] AC 264 ) in which the authority of Young v.
8 ‘ ( a ) as of right , from any final judgment of the Court of Appeal where the matter in dispute on the appeal amounts to or is of the value of 5,000 New Zealand dollars or upwards , or where the appeal involves , directly or indirectly , some claim or question to or respecting property or some civil right amounting to or of the value of 5,000 New Zealand dollars or upwards ; and ( b ) at the discretion of the Court of Appeal from any other judgment of that court , whether final or interlocutory , if , in the opinion of that court , the question involved in the appeal is one which by reason of its great general or public importance , or otherwise , ought to be submitted to His Majesty in Council for decision .
9 Here was the real Iron Curtain dividing West from East , blocking the twenty-one countries of the Council of Europe from the Warsaw Pact countries and the sixteen Republics of the Soviet Union .
10 He became a member of the council of state from 1649 to 1651 , and its president for a while , and entered the Rump Parliament as MP for King 's Lynn .
11 Er I do n't think it probably that it does decide help you decide where the location ought to be , but that having said that , I would not want to minimize in any way er the views of my authority er as to the importance erm of the look of contributions from the private sector .
12 While the Combination Laws of 1799 and 1800 , enacted as a response to a fear of the spread of revolution from the continent , had been notoriously ineffective , prudence remained the order of the day even after their repeal in 1824 , and it remained convenient to take advantage of friendly society legislation .
13 In Berlin , the same man , Anton von Werner , was director of the Royal College and leader of the Society of Artists from 1887 .
14 A member of the Society of Dilettanti from its foundation c .1736 , he devised an influential plan in February 1749 for a public Academy of Arts , and was also an active fellow of the Society of Antiquaries ( 1734–48 ) .
15 He was president of the Institute of Petroleum from 1968 to 1970 and president of the UK Petroleum Industries Association from 1979 to 1980 .
16 He was president of the Institute of Chemistry from 1883 to 1888 .
17 Matthew records the announcement of the birth of Jesus from Joseph 's point of view .
18 Luke records the announcement of the birth of Jesus from Mary 's point of view .
19 A commitment to legislation , timetables and budgets , as well as the reversal of the outflow of resources from the developing nations , were vital , in addressing the root causes of environmental problems , it warned .
20 The presence of a significant number of such pupils in the ‘ integrated ’ schools would ensure that the manner and style of those places would change : there would be no risk of new pupils simply being absorbed into the mores of the upper classes , or of a repetition of the kind of conflict from which a working-class minority had suffered in grammar schools .
21 If there is a lunar-wide crust then one explanation of the offset of the centre of mass from the centre of figure is that the crust on the far side is , on average , thicker than on the near side .
22 Further evidence for a rigid outer Moon comes from the 5 km offset ( towards the far side ) of the centre of figure from the centre of mass .
23 The 5 km offset of the centre of figure from the centre of mass need not be explained by a change in crust thickness from 50 km on the near side to 75 km on the far side , but by an asymmetry spread over a greater depth and consequently slight on a global scale .
24 To that , also , the King had given a great part of his attention , but when , late in the spring , word came of the sighting of ships from Normandy in the Clyde , he left his wife and household at Perth , where they had stayed a full week , and rode with a small retinue westwards to meet them .
25 As a result of the transfer of surpluses from , and votes of , DUP and Unionist candidates VUPP gained one more seat than their single quota of first preference votes would suggest .
26 The exact point of the transfer of responsibility from the ward to the theatre staff varies .
27 The local authority exercising its parental responsibility would certainly have to consider very carefully whether it accepted that practitioner 's advice and any advice as to the risks of the transfer of J. from one hospital to another before giving its consent to such different treatment .
28 Traditional models consist of the transfer of information from one person to another , for example , from user to designer and from manager to designer .
29 The Gundovald crisis can thus be seen as a classic illustration of the difficulties raised at the time of the transfer of power from one monarch to another : the dispossessed and those who thought that their status was in question set about making contact with a new lord .
30 Whereas the 1832 Act helped ensure the dominance of the House of Commons within the formal political process , the passage of the Reform Act of 1867 began a process of the transfer of power from Parliament to Ministers .
  Next page