Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] from [art] fact " in BNC.

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1 The PLO 's reluctance stemmed partly from the fact that the international community officially shared its view that East Jerusalem was illegally occupied by Israel and partly because such an exclusion would prevent its most able supporters ( including Husseini ) from attending the conference .
2 And the view should not be ruled out too summarily that all our desires grow up from the fact that certain things have been found immediately pleasurable .
3 The power of the Establishment came not from the fact that a few dozen people imposed their will on the rest of us , but from the fact that for a long time we felt it right that the opinions of such people should have respectful attention paid to them .
4 But who does that benefit apart from the fact they 're getting a salary at the end of the day ?
5 ‘ People are fed up hearing about our injuries , but you ca n't run away from the fact that we have 28 professionals , and half of those ca n't be considered .
6 The system is using it for itself , but you can not run away from the fact that it has helped a lot of women to pursue careers rather than to sit down and nurse babies .
7 And , in addition to having to keep his clothes clean , his body was often too bruised and painful to play apart from the fact that he did n't know how to .
8 Mike Loosley , general secretary of the Inner London Teachers ' Association - the area union branch — said yesterday : ‘ There 's no getting away from the fact that a child sent home on a particular day as a result of our action will be suffering .
9 The competitive Morris was being unduly hard on himself , though there was no getting away from the fact that a missed kick by him to touch in the final second against Wasps at Sudbury had spelt defeat .
10 There 's not getting away from the fact that a perm is a chemical treatment that works by altering the structure of your hair .
11 But there is no getting away from the fact that we must still use water wisely . ’
12 But there is no getting away from the fact that he is on the left of the party .
13 But although I found it impossible not to be moved by the vibes and hype of enthusiastic publicity people and charming sales teams , there is no getting away from the fact that it is going to be a very tough year , with too many major titles to be able to do justice to them all ; and I do n't see any real evidence of anyone pruning their lists .
14 Love it or loathe it , there is no getting away from the fact that , all around the world , people care deeply about their football .
15 Up until the introduction of the Macintosh SE and II systems there was little getting away from the fact that the two systems were fundamentally incompatible .
16 There was no getting away from the fact that sometimes being with Miguel made Shelley feel happier than she had ever been in her life .
17 There was no getting away from the fact that , as a unit , the Scotland back row were so disjointed as to be at times perilously close to a vacuum .
18 But there is no getting away from the fact that Howard has got big problems .
19 These competing perspectives on the range of viable solutions will flow also from the fact that theories normally carry with them implicit and explicit notions of how society ought to be structured .
20 We noted that controlling for sex would have reduced the size of the original effect , because there would have been a spurious component stemming purely from the fact that more women are in low status jobs and more women go absent .
21 As I understand the position , the duty in negligence arose purely from the fact that the wife was also a customer of the bank .
22 Little is known about his family , and his date of birth can be inferred only from the fact that he was apprenticed to a mercer in 1528 .
23 We have never gone away from the fact that the town plan and the policy statement in there that if the road was provided the land is in the town plan and this Council would have approved it .
24 The effect resulted mainly from the fact that larger coalitions could maintain tenure of a pride for longer .
25 Indeed this emerges immediately from the fact that adjectives which are plainly non-restrictive can accompany proper names : ( 4 ) the eloquent Dryden is too learned for some tastes clever Polly left before they called for volunteers Even if we accept the view , less than universally supported , that proper names do have meaning , being clever is certainly no part of the name Polly on the type level , nor is eloquence of the name Dryden .
26 I mean we do n't actually get that involved apart from the fact that we did originally have a leaflet .
27 It is important that we do not get away from the fact that , when any charge is laid , there must be evidence that will hold up for convicting somebody of that charge .
28 You see , we ca n't get away from the fact that if Kemp was in London , he could easily have caught an earlier train .
29 ‘ You ca n't get away from the fact that women vets are n't looked on kindly by farmers .
30 because of our fears over water supplies , we have reduced abstraction to less than two thirds of our licence during the last 2 years , but we can not get away from the fact that this is a severe drought which affects every underground source .
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