Example sentences of "[adv] in [adj] [noun] from " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There is no consistent air movement , and the seeds are drifting outwards in all directions from the tree .
2 Their economy was strong and could gain sufficiently in commercial terms from freer trade measures carried out through the OEEC — without any loss of sovereignty .
3 This was visible not only in fierce complaint from reactionary newspapers but also , paradoxically enough , in the growth of the liberal zemstvo movement .
4 Again , Guérard gives a recipe for saddle of hare with hot beetroot which differs only in minor respects from the one Pomiane published two or three times and which I myself used often in the fifties , and eventually quoted , with acknowledgements , in French Provincial Cooking .
5 Others have found similar strains only in repeated samples from the same individual .
6 Flood-stories have been handed down in many languages from most parts of the world .
7 Indeed the hard and fast distinction between firms becomes very blurred when we find some supplier companies located within the plant of the parent firm , when the smaller company is managed by ex employees of the larger one or when the bulk of the small firm machinery is handed down in second-hand sales from their principal buyer .
8 Base surges spread out radially in all directions from the base of the rising ash column , rolling down the volcano at speeds of nearly a hundred kilometres per hour and covering an area of more than 230 square kilometres .
9 For example , the Chelsea Card from Chelsea Building Society can be used to draw £200 daily in local currency from more than 4,000 machines in Europe and more than 50,000 in America , Canada , Australia and Japan .
10 I would shrink away in instant horror from the hand that placed itself on my arm or shoulder in an embarrassed and half-hearted attempt at communication .
11 To move to a rural area and to move away in some measure from traditional routine assembly techniques was seen as a partial answer to these problems .
12 With the Atlantic Ocean floor spreading away in opposite directions from the ridge , Iceland is getting wider at a rate of about half a centimetre per year , so a lot of new material has to be added continuously in the zone of tension in the middle , or else the two halves would soon be completely separated .
13 Yet it 's flexible enough to pull away in fourth gear from 1000rpm .
14 NICK FALDO and Severiano Ballesteros both signed off in good heart from the Freeport-McMoran Classic at English Turn yesterday , each having final rounds of 69 to ensure top 10 finishes as they head for Augusta and the Masters .
15 Having set off in great style from Salzburg in their own carriage , they were now so impecunious that they were obliged to sell it before the frontier and go on by postchaise .
16 You may move cards off in ascending order from Ace to King to their respective piles off the playing area .
17 I am hardly in mortal danger from her , but she has drawn blood on numerous occasions .
18 ‘ We were all still in high spirits from the party and everyone was chatting .
19 Radioactivity exists naturally , emanating from the rocks that make up the Earth 's crust , particularly granite , and also in cosmic rays from space .
20 As Keeble pointed out , this factor was important not only in interregional decentralization but also in intraregional shifts from big cities .
21 Public procurement and especially defence procurement led to a double demand for semiconductors , which were used directly ( for example in military missiles ( and which were also in heavy demand from the computer industry ( for defence and other federal government use ) .
22 This was partly due to reduced growth both in financial transfers from Greeks abroad and in tourism revenue .
23 H pylori infection was proved by positive cultures or histological identification , or both in antral specimens from 113 patients .
24 Wittgenstein 's treatment of intentionality can be summed up in one sentence from the Philosophical Grammar : ‘ It is in language that it 's all done ’ .
25 It trembled on the cold stairs and rose up in invisible clouds from the thread-bare carpets .
26 Oh no , they and he turns up in some hanging from a chain he 's being cruel to her is n't he ?
27 ‘ You 're probably in more danger from a British rifle bullet than you are from any French weapon . ’
28 Well special report on tonights programme from Wesley Smith , we erm have got also some other reports coming up later on in Central South from Wesley Smith in America .
29 People live in households often in different places from their work .
30 The forgiveness offered by her young blue eyes , which peep out in mortal embarrassment from the old sneaker of her face , so puffed , so pinched , so parched .
  Next page