Example sentences of "[be] [adj] [verb] from the " in BNC.

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1 She had been due to return from the Balmoral estate for the engagement tomorrow afternoon at St James 's Palace and St Martin-in-the-Fields Church .
2 Research studies which may seem quite practical to university people may seem very far removed from reality to practitioners , and research workers who are prepared to learn from the practitioners can often modify their research plans and greatly improve them .
3 We are delighted to hear from the shadow to the shadow Secretary of State .
4 Secondly , directors and managers have interests or aspirations which differ from those of the members , and hence their objectives are likely to diverge from the goal of maximising profits .
5 The most far-reaching changes in social work , however , are likely to result from the implementation of the government 's proposals on community care .
6 The appropriate groupings are likely to result from the application of multivariate methods such as cluster analysis .
7 They are likely to run from the sort of fight that makes good corporate governance stick .
8 Ian Lang , the Scottish Secretary , has confirmed to The Scotsman that the costs are likely to vary from the originals .
9 You are likely to benefit from the experience too .
10 " It is now stated that a vast importation of Irish Beggars have already arrived upon the Island , and that others are likely to follow from the misconduct of our own Boatmen — the Community at large are warned to beware of harbouring foreign beggars … "
11 I 'm not sure what Mr and Mrs Bloggs are supposed to gain from the pages of ticked sums and the often half finished pieces of writing .
12 They are looking after their commercial interests , but unfortunately they are doing so at the expense of the tenants and customers , the very people who are supposed to benefit from the legislation .
13 For economists , who came late to the study of bureaucracy , it has been natural to start from the parallel with the private sector of the economy .
14 Details are hard to elicit from the texts , since in AD 529 it was abolished by Justinian , who later brusquely referred to it as a tenebrosissimus error .
15 M oral philosophers are accustomed to start from the individual pursuing his own ends ; at once the question arises ‘ Why should I prefer anyone else 's to my own ? ’ , and until it can be answered the advantage lies with the egoist .
16 Some sort of flying creature is definitely a good idea , as otherwise you are vulnerable to attack from the air .
17 If you are flying to the east and crossing only one or two time zones or flying to the west and crossing three or less time zones , you are unlikely to suffer from the effects of jet-lag .
18 It seems reasonable to assume , therefore , that they are unlikely to come from the Author of Scripture .
19 Moreover , American firms are reluctant to buy from the Japanese because , as one executive put it , ’ we will never be any more than their second most important customer ’ .
20 While age has emerged as a predictor of the current linguistic achievement in BSL , it need not always be the case if BSL teachers are able to learn from the second language literature .
21 Once we see that the relationship between a set of explanatory principles and the more specific analyses offered by social scientists must be a reciprocal one we are able to benefit from the fact that , just as social scientific practice is moulded by existing views of explanation , so those views can be refined and altered by the impact of practice .
22 She said : ‘ There are already support groups in Barnard Castle and Shildon and I feel people should know that people of Richmondshire are able to benefit from the Darlington hospice . ’
23 The process is confined to low-viscosity magmas , such as basalts , in which the crystals are able to separate from the active thermal boundary layer during convection .
24 Even if any of them was open they were all solid sash types which would have been heavy to raise from the outside .
25 They were walking on to the long ridge they had been able to see from the cottage window .
26 They might not have been able to shelter from the bombs .
27 By then , released from stricter vigilance , Nicholas had been able to move from the Citadel to the house of Katelina , and soon Abul Ismail was permitted to join him .
28 But the development of the law does seem to show that judges have been able to dispense from the necessity of justification under a public policy test of reasonableness such contracts or provisions of contracts as , under contemporary conditions , may be found to have passed into the accepted and normal currency of commercial or contractual or conveyancing relations .
29 Mary was a fast runner , but she would n't have been able to escape from the man if he had n't tripped .
30 Recently , the World Bank has been able to hide from the spotlight that has laid the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development bare before the public gaze .
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