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

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1 From this trilogy of cases the modem approach to the interpretation of exemption clauses has emerged .
2 From this type of starting-point the SDPP expected two things to flow , namely the capturing of a long-term vision within which short-term goals were to be set and , second , a relief in teacher stress .
3 From this point of view the allocation of function and interface design are one core design activity based on the man-machine concept .
4 From this point of view the French have never regarded fascism as an aberration , concurring rather with Césaire and Fanon that it can be explained quite simply as European colonialism brought home to Europe by a country that had been deprived of its overseas empire after World War I. French poststructuralism , therefore , involves a critique of reason as a system of domination comparable to that of the Frankfurt School , but rather than setting up the possibility of a purged reason operating in an unblocked , ideal speech situation as a defence against tyranny and coercion in the manner of a Habermas , it reanalyses the operations of reason as such .
5 From this point of view the middle class is held to consist of non-manual workers .
6 From this point of view the professional-managerial class are likely to try to maintain their position by forming themselves into professions .
7 From this point of view the struggle to remove barriers could be regarded as the seed bed for human arts .
8 From this point of view the formation of a distinctive and vibrant disability culture is a vital component in the construction of an accessible route to empowerment .
9 From this point of view the state is not seen as a threat to freedom , but is rather regarded as a vehicle for securing broad community and individual rights against the power .
10 From this point of view the appropriate label for the payment is Evans-Pritchard 's term : " bridewealth " .
11 For political sociology , on the other hand , the principal question is the relation between a form of society and a type of political system ; and from this point of view the foregoing distinctions may have little significance .
12 From this point of view the relevant question to ask about the shift of the aggregate demand curve in figure 4.4 from AD to AD 1 is : Was it predictable on the basis of the available information relating to the process determining aggregate demand ?
13 That the to preceding the infinitive should bring a meaning of its own into the context is no surprise for a semantically oriented approach to language , since from this point of view the very raison d'être of a linguistic sign is to express meaning .
14 From this period of time the great majority of extant work is ecclesiastical .
15 ( 10 ) It 's possible that there 's life on Mars ( 11 ) It 's possible that there 's life on Mars and it 's possible that there is no life on Mars ( 12 ) It 's possible that there 's life on Mars , and in fact it is now certain that there is Now from this set of dilemmas the notion of implicature offers a way out , for it allows one to claim that natural language expressions do tend to have simple , stable and unitary senses ( in many cases anyway ) , but that this stable semantic core of en has an unstable , context-specific pragmatic overlay — namely a set of implicatures .
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