Example sentences of "[that] [vb mod] [vb infin] from " in BNC.

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1 The counsellor must also be aware of the words that are being used , and the possible impact that they may have , or the possibility for misunderstanding that may arise from them .
2 The problems that may arise from an individual pupil 's needs must also be addressed , and possible solutions proffered .
3 ( 3 ) The replies that you give are not evidence against you in any later criminal trial that may arise from this case .
4 The present research will consider cognitive constraints that may arise from limitations in children 's capacities for monitoring their own success at a task and thereby employ a strategic approach to its mastery .
5 It seems realistic to expect the auditor to take such information into account in his review of the audit and the person acting as auditor also needs to be aware of other non-audit work on his client that partners in his firm may be doing such as for example tax work and they in turn should consider whether any information that may arise from their work is relevant to the conduct of the audit and where it is , they should also consider whether it is relevant to the duty to report to the regulator , the partner carrying out the audit should also if possible , discuss it with his client .
6 The social costs of not recognizing the intensity of high demand groups may be considerably greater than any inequities that may stem from their success in demanding more than the median voter is interested in ( Wade 1979 ) .
7 Daikin said he had indications from ‘ people involved in making a better South Africa ’ that ‘ if the tour were not to take place there are certain advantages that may flow from that decision , a highly attractive package for young South Africans of the future that involves more than cricket ’ .
8 Little is said about how this process works apart from the suggestion that a number of presentations of a given object or event may be needed if invariant aspects are to be distinguished from incidental features that may vary from one occasion to another .
9 However , the reorganization of water resources may lead to the use of lower.quality water or , as is worse from the textile finishers ' point of view , water that may vary from time to time .
10 The authors recognise the many methodological problems in studying disabilities that may result from hearing impairment .
11 The right of shareholders to restrain directors from entering into transactions that fall outside the company 's objects is preserved , however , and the directors remain liable to the company for any loss that may result from entering into such transactions , and to that extent the doctrine of ultra vires survives .
12 The problem of the damage that may result from litigation is undoubtedly a real one , and argues against giving shareholders unrestricted standing to sue , which might otherwise be regarded as a plausible means of increasing the chances of enforcement .
13 The only good that may result from this modern-day flood may be the removal of the barrier that has prevented people from discussing the humiliation and tortures that they endure .
14 Also , endoscopic treatment has the advantage of pre-emptying the obstruction that may result from radiotherapy .
15 So they 're all , they 're trading off their gains from economies of scale , right , with erm , variability of , of income that may result from sort of , putting all their eggs in one basket , so diversification is the main way in which farmers cope er , with an uncertain environment .
16 Departments will have to place a monetary value on any destruction of the environment that may result from government policies , meaning that environmental impact will be assessed at the same time as other benefits and costs .
17 It 's difficult not to get involved in , or at least take a view on , the current Great Educational Examination Debate that 's sweeping the UK — the standards being achieved , or not achieved , as the case may be ; the fairness of a system that employs different examining boards with different syllabuses and differing subject ingredients and , importantly , with varying amounts ( from zero per cent to 100 per cent ) of coursework that may benefit from parental/teacher ‘ assistance ’ in varying degrees .
18 er of others that may benefit from this but only if and we er you find this of particular benefit , er to yourself .
19 the right to have needs and wants that may differ from other people 's
20 What is more of a worry for them is the damage that may ensue from a significant and hostile minority which now feels entitled to speak its mind .
21 There 's a tremendous enthusiasm , partly I suppose because they do n't want to be left behind in the , the new technology , but I think , more positively , that they see the advantages and some of the benefits that may come from having these machines in their classrooms .
22 In the modern empirical study of politics , the emphasis upon psychological factors in explaining political behaviour is more frequently associated with Graham Walles , whose Human Nature in Politics showed that the political behaviour of individuals was just as likely to be the result of ‘ irrational ’ beliefs as of a rational' calculation of the benefits and penalties that may follow from such behaviour .
23 None of these religions has satisfied its real purpose , which is to provide fully acceptable and uncontentious guidance in human discrimination between right and wrong , and in the behaviour that should stem from that discrimination .
24 When parents relate to their children as if they were partners and look to them for the support and even sexual comfort that should come from other adults , the boundary surrounding and protecting childhood is broken .
25 As the most recent poll tax was itself reduced as a result of the raising of VAT by 2.5 per cent , where are benefits that should accrue from what was supposed to be a ‘ new ’ progressive property tax ?
26 The committee was seriously convinced of the benefits that must result from an institution to cultivate and teach veterinary medicine ; the object of this committee 's concern , and that of Vial , were one and the same ; and it was greatly to be desired that the two plans — that of the Odiham Agricultural Society and that of Vial — ( which may be termed the Alfort plan ) should be consolidated into one .
27 The heroine of the romance novel is presented at a moment of transition in her life , an isolated figure ; the romance narrative depicts young women at a point of defining themselves as adult women , a definition that must come from the heroine in the absence of any supportive network :
28 This study will examine such problems , as and when they arise — and will do so through an ethnographic grasp of cultural differences and misunderstandings on topics that might range from the price of butter to question of minorities , language , drugs and terror .
29 The other inhibition is more pragmatic : fear of unlimited losses on short positions that might result from a sudden market rally .
30 Nevertheless , provided that it is possible to make informed assumptions about the likely shapes and sizes of buildings at particular periods , a computer can be programmed to search for particular configurations of post-holes that might result from such a structure and ‘ peel them off ’ , to reveal a simplified picture of earlier building phases .
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