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

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1 Scott Anderson was particularly pleased with an album of stamps from all over the world , commemorating the Wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales ; and with his ‘ find ’ of the year , inside an ordinary catalogue , of something extraordinary – an envelope from the U.S. bearing a 1869 postmark .
2 The late David Penhaligon argued for a separate constituency in nineteen seventy eight and I argued the case in select committee in nineteen eighty eight and the most important fact about these responses is the sheer weight of numbers from democratically elected bodies in Cornwall .
3 These had included education in Hungarian , increased autonomy in local affairs and an end to the forced settlement of immigrants from elsewhere in Romania .
4 The most important changes , however , have resulted from the live coverage of proceedings from about 3.10 till 4.50 pm every Tuesday and Thursday and longer on some occasions .
5 Royalty likes to go where royalty has already been , and in the second half of the last century Biarritz became the resort of monarchs from all over .
6 Three issues each year cover a wide variety of topics from all over Europe and the magazine provides an invaluable forum for the exchange of experiences .
7 It would be unrealistic to expect the majority of researchers from overseas to maintain their UK research interests when they return to their country of origin , or move elsewhere , as many of them do , to the extent that they would wish to complete a paper or papers based on their UK findings .
8 It would be unrealistic to expect the majority of researchers from overseas to maintain their UK research interests when they return to their country of origin , or move elsewhere , as many of them do , to the extent that they would wish to complete a paper or papers based on their UK findings .
9 A loud clatter of arms from below interrupted her .
10 The ordinance envisioned a common and compulsory branding system which would make possible the easy identification of cattle from anywhere in the island .
11 Unlike Descartes , who felt the need to prove their existence , and Malebranche , who was certain he could not , Locke simply had no doubt that material things existed and caused our ideas : ‘ The actual receiving of ideas from without … makes us know , that something doth exist at that time without us , which causes that idea in us . ’
12 As the latent inhibition effect seen at 4 h after lengthy pre-exposure is supposed to enjoy the benefit of contributions from both the short-term mechanism and from the context — stimulus association , this effect should be especially strong .
13 But the procurement of scientists from overseas as a novelty intrigued him .
14 If anyone is interested i could post excerpts from an article sent to rec.sport.soccer which sums up the norwegains playing in Premiership — in fact we have the largest contigent of players from outside the British Isles right now .
15 All the crop management methods are set out for growers in a document compiled by JS with the help of experts from all over the world .
16 First , came that Sunday when members of the congregation , with the help of friends from all over the City and beyond , even via Tiberias , on Lake Galilee , set to work to prepare the whole church for Christian Aid .
17 It 's only dirty tricks and underhanded tactics used by the T & G during the approach of the Workers ' Union so must realize Congress , to be more positive , one of the major benefits or more , the major benefit from future amalgamation with the T & G would be the free help of officials from both unions and and negotiations both national , regional and even at times individual company level where both unions help members .
18 Barr Thomson Engineering was relaunched yesterday as BTE ( Glenrothes ) , after an 11-week negotiation culminated in an innovative rescue package involving a partnership with a major customer , Tecnomarine Services of Aberdeen , and a consortium of backers from both the public and private sectors .
19 In 1829 he began the arboretum at Westonbirt , where a tract of sandy loam covering 114 acres allowed the planting and raising of trees from almost any country in the world .
20 The obvious danger under the 1981 arrangements is that , given the overwhelming percentage of votes from outside the Commons , a new Leader might have little support in the PLP .
21 Violations — poaching in another household 's area — is referred to a special council of eunuchs from all over India and Pakistan which meets once a year .
22 WE have seen the imposition of charges from so called care groups and the imposition of VAT on private care charges .
23 Shamrock 's own detailed arrivals book shows regular receipt of monkeys from both
24 The biggest advantage though for the conservative administrations in Washington , Ottawa , Bonn and London is the fragmentation of labour and the divorcing of workers from traditionally powerful unions .
25 Immediately following the invasion and on the basis of reports from all over the Reich , the SD registered ‘ the greatest surprise ’ and ‘ a certain dismay ’ ( though no major shock ) at the news .
26 Colleagues from the medical profession were joined by local MPs , lawyers , and a wide circle of friends from all over the country and further afield .
27 Having ‘ failed ’ to find the curriculum or examination version of the Holy Grail for themselves during the sixties and seventies ( and having exhausted themselves in the process ) the schools are , at the moment , resigned to accepting a string of panaceas from without — the YTS/TVEI initiatives are now being superseded or subsumed by the National Curriculum cure-all .
28 In Latin America , the Second Vatican Council was followed up by a meeting of bishops from all over the continent in Medellin , Colombia .
29 His job was to keep the stream of voices from inside the apartment above him recorded , encoded , radioed to Grosvenor Square for decoding and digestion by the listeners in the basement .
30 No two coalfields were the same , but if a general pattern can be discerned from the variety of experience it is that during the first half of the nineteenth century each region largely generated its own workforce from the natural increase of its population , but that the spectacular later developments drew not only upon local men who left the farms or rural crafts and industries in large numbers but also upon the surplus population of counties from all over the British Isles .
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