Example sentences of "[noun sg] be [adj] [verb] from " in BNC.
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1 | More popular — because they were cheaper — than the Joshua Marshall type of resurrection monument were those produced from the yard of John and Matthias Christmas . |
2 | Most of the buying is likely to come from Japan . |
3 | It works on the assumption that each side is willing to move from its starting point during the negotiations . |
4 | The strongest opposition is likely to come from supporters of nuclear power , which was cut sharply in the Clinton budget . |
5 | You can work out the number of fish a pond is able to support from the surface area and size of fish . |
6 | Labour is unlikely to lose from the Gulf . |
7 | That the difference of this style from that of ordinary vase-painting is due to influence from wall-painting is confirmed by the existence of slightly later terracotta metopes from temples at Calydon and Thermon in Aetolia , an area under Corinthian domination . |
8 | Also , this was where the most opposition was likely to come from , from Jim Cavalier . |
9 | Mis-recognitions and errors of spelling are impossible to distinguish from each other , given the nature of the data output from the pattern recogniser , however they should be detected and corrected if possible . |
10 | The greatest error is likely to derive from the migration component . |
11 | Better management is likely to result from a period of careful observation and assessment , with considerable support being provided at this time through frequent contact with nursing and other ward staff . |
12 | Autumn passage is difficult to disentangle from winter movements , which have been recorded immediately before severe weather , and the normal wanderings of birds wintering in the Channel . |
13 | Unfortunately , we still have relatively little idea of how the child is able to move from a practical understanding of how , for example , objects change location as a result of actions performed by people , to the more abstract and general understanding of semantic categories such as agent , action and object , which provide the basis for early syntax ( Bowerman 1976 ) . |
14 | For example , when a child is playing so destructively with a toy that it is likely to break , if the natural consequence occurs and the toy breaks , the child is able to learn from the outcome of his/her actions . |
15 | M M My Lords , i it is important that whatever is taught to a child between the ages of five and eleven that the child is able to benefit from it educationally if the child is , is overloaded as it were by being presented erm a curriculum that they simply can not manage , then that 's going to create confusion , but it 's also important to say that one of the erm er objectives of this whole exercise is to underpin all education , both morally and spiritually and I believe we 're doing a great deal to get that right . |
16 | Selkirk looks best in the Beefeater Gin Celebration Mile where the stiffest test is likely to come from French challenger Steinbeck , who loves the mud . |
17 | Guinness stout was first imported from Liverpool in the late 1880s and by the early 1960s had become so popular that Guinness decided to brew in the country . |
18 | Brief Truce was unable to benefit from Arazi 's absence — he was beaten a neck by All At Sea , who became Henry Cecil 's first Group One winner of the year . |
19 | It is apparent from the findings of fact that the justices made no findings , or if they did they did not record them , as to whether ( i ) the child was likely to abscond from any other description of accommodation , or ( ii ) that if he absconded he would be likely to suffer significant harm . |
20 | The head can be identified as that of Hercules from the club around his neck , but it is a very unusual representation of Hercules : the absence of a beard , the diadem , the upturned eye and the hairstyle are all derived from that of the great conqueror Alexander the Great ( compare fig. 14 ) . |
21 | Present evidence suggests that the numbers of the elderly who will find difficulties in looking after themselves will therefore increase : for example , about 20 per cent of the 80-and-over group are likely to suffer from dementia ( Grundy , 1986 ) . |
22 | It suggested that , despite its choice on May 26 of veteran left-wing dissident leader Kim Dae Jung as its presidential candidate , both party and leader were keen to move from the left to the political centre in a bid to garner sufficient votes to win the presidency . |
23 | The energy absorbed during the reaction is first taken from the reaction mixture . |
24 | ‘ Those extensive powers are conferred upon the court for the beneficial winding up of the company , for sometimes it happens that the liquidator is unable to obtain from unwilling persons the information which he requires . |
25 | The main threat to London 's share of global futures and options business is likely to come from existing exchanges on mainland Europe . |
26 | There are two types of pub rock occasions : those , like the one described above , where the band is likely to suffer from agrophobia ; and those where the pub is so crowded , death through asphixiation seems to be the only way to get out . |
27 | Ministers still stand by Lawther 's conclusion that only 10 per cent of lead in the human body is likely to come from additives in petrol . |
28 | When the body of one specimen was first brought from Australia to Britain in 1798 , it was considered to be some kind of taxidermist 's hoax — a mixture of bird and mammal — which , to some extent , it is . |
29 | Because of the country 's particular situation , however , the eventual outcome in the GDR was likely to diverge from the rest of the region . |
30 | The disarming process was due to begin from the moment of Senora Chamorro 's inauguration and be completed by the tenth of June . |