Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [prep] [noun] from " in BNC.

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1 In Devon and Cornwall indeed there seems to have been a long tradition of piratical and privateering activity in addition to legitimate trade , which may well have laid the foundation for the activities of seamen from this part of the country in the Elizabethan age ( 63 , pp.159–60 ) .
2 The refusal of Erastus to derive the forms of bodies from the stars , or from anything within nature , pointed toward the empiricism of Bacon , for whom the only guides to knowledge were experience and the bible .
3 Oxfordshire piloted the forms in Banbury from October 1991 to March this year .
4 High seriousness mingled with amiable Bohemianism , provincial spoke to cosmopolitan , Fabian joked with hedonist , and teachers of mathematics admired the hats of potters from Cornwall .
5 The place seems to enshrine for the Swiss their national ideals from the earliest days of the Confederation onward , and there is an element of pilgrimage attendant on the crowds of citizens from all parts of the country , wearing many varieties of national costume , who come here , ferried across from Brunnen by relays of lake steamers , to join in the observations of the day , commemorating the solemn oath of 1307 which confirmed the earlier League Covenant of 1291 to defend inherited liberties .
6 Des , who used to be a goalkeeper on Stoke City 's books , turned on the style with some continental soccer skills to entertain the crowds before netting from the spot .
7 ‘ Take one of the strips of plaster from my arm and put it over the girl here 's mouth .
8 The very separation of the institutions of art from society neutralized the critical impulse of modernism , whereas realism functioned to centre , rather than to decentre , bourgeois identity .
9 The main beneficiary of the ÖVP decline was the liberal party ( FPÖ ) , led by the populist Jörg Haider , which based its campaign on warning against the dangers of immigration from eastern Europe .
10 56 An advertisement from The Sound Waves — demonstrating the dangers of distortion from using the wrong needle , or the benefits of being ‘ blown away ’ by use of the right needle !
11 Professor T , R. Lee said that people were exercised about the dangers to life from railways when they were new , but they were eventually seen as negligible , with the implication for some that the same sequence would happen with nuclear energy .
12 PLANS to reduce the dangers to consumers from products containing asbestos have been drastically cut , because of disagreement within EEC .
13 The HSE takes a generally sanguine view of the dangers to health from biotechnology .
14 Group 4 — 65 men — were landing at the north end of the town , putting the defenders under pressure from two sides , while 30 men of Group 5 had landed from HMS Oribi at about 1000 hours .
15 I agree completely with J Derrick McClure and William Neill ( Points of View , 11 February ) about the need for Scottish people to recognise and respect the views of people from different backgrounds in this country .
16 The plaintiff must then put in the notes of evidence from the magistrates ' court ( or the Crown Court ) with a r21 notice and apply for directions under r28 in order to force the defendant to call all the witnesses from the magistrates ' court to give evidence in the civil trial .
17 ‘ Gould is publishing the Birds of Australia from stuffed Skins ’ , wrote Audubon contemptuously to Bachman .
18 The more subversive possibility is that the discourse of prejudice contains an element that threatens the foundations of multiculturalism from within .
19 The comparatively recent date at which water flowed in these wadis is attested by the presence in some of the oases of fish from tropical Africa , while Pleistocene beds in the Atlas have a fauna which has been called a Zambezi fauna .
20 It is interesting to compare the reactions of people from different religions to this statement .
21 To understand the cultures of racism from which these texts are produced we need to moved from a formal or semiotic level of analysis to a consideration of more substantive issues .
22 The people at Beckford Silk are happy to think that their ties will end up around the necks of tourists from all over the world .
23 Management ought to look at the work that you do and that you could be asked to do under any contractual ‘ flexibility ’ provisions before finally deciding upon the groups of people from which redundancy candidates will be sought .
24 I only add a few words of my own out of deference to the contrary view expressed by my noble and learned friend , Lord Lowry , and to consider the cases on thefts from companies to which we were referred in the course of argument .
25 Slowly , like a sleepwalker , she gathered up the torn , bruised straw and the scraps of ribbon from the bed and the floor , and put them in the hatbox .
26 The voiders were at his feet in moments , dutifully removing the scraps of matter from Dowd 's hand-made shoes .
27 He gave the jury a list of Meehan 's past convictions , knowing that he was prevented by the rules of evidence from telling them that Waddell was at that moment serving a sentence in Barlinnie for wounding or that he had served a previous sentence for perjury at Meehan 's trial .
28 This chapter will examine the rules of competition from the competitors ' point of view , rather than from the referees ' .
29 Martinho , too , sensing what the rules of disengagement from the deathbed were going to be , allowed them to have their fun , or the priestly hypocrite he 'd been in the jungle — got his kicks out of the spectacle , what he might regard as my just deserts for my equivocal behaviour toward him in those nightmare days .
30 An adult of 472 gastric emptying tests carried out over a 10 year period was performed to discover the reasons for requests from consultant clinicians , their anticipation of the results of tests , and the influence of the results upon the subsequent management of their patients .
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