Example sentences of "[vb -s] [art] [noun sg] [adv] from " in BNC.

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1 The new rule is ‘ no player will be offside if he receives the ball directly from his own half of the field ’ .
2 It is significant that Mrs Thatcher 's cabinet still contains no woman apart from herself .
3 The relativism of values seems so sensible and convincing until we reflect on what this implies , namely that what we feel passionately about with regard to truth or justice or purpose of life has no justification apart from the fact that we happen to think like this .
4 Some philosophers deny the possibility of any fundamental conflict between justice and fairness because they believe that one of these virtues in the end derives from the other : Some say that justice has no meaning apart from fairness , that in politics , as in roulette , whatever happens through fair procedures is just .
5 On an application for any interim relief under subsection ( 1 ) the court may refuse to grant that relief if , in the opinion of the court , the fact that the court has no jurisdiction apart from this section in relation to the subject-matter of the proceedings in question makes it inexpedient for the court to grant it .
6 This allows a move away from purely ‘ time-based ’ training to ‘ competency-based ’ training , vital to quality aircraft maintenance engineering .
7 This second interpretation of the originally American concept of search , and how it could be applied to Britain , sees the business more from the client 's point of view than that of the would-be consultant .
8 Foucault ( 1980 ) details the move away from the army , to control by the civil police ; describing how the judicial control and surveillance systems emerged .
9 Also , as compared with a shot in which the subject traverses the picture directly from one side to the other , the diagonal movement gives the eye longer in which to take in what is going on and it reduces the need to pan the camera to follow the subject .
10 The shift in stance away from cultural exile towards critical engagement , for him marks a shift away from the élitism of the moderns towards postmodernism .
11 The growing interest in exploring the ‘ stored information about … objects held by individuals ’ — sometimes referred to as cognitions — marks a shift away from the view of the media as of great importance in the formation of individual and specific attitudes or opinions .
12 He sees a movement away from a situation where there were extensive kin ties but a lack of really close relationships in the conjugal family , through the emergence of a family based on the patriarchal authority of the father , to a dominant form of family life which began to take shape around the middle of the seventeenth century , and was characterized by close emotional bonds between parents and children and a strong sense of privacy in the nuclear family household .
13 The paucity of available evidence concerning the foundation of the institution and the activities of the early Muftis means that one can hope to do no more than to draw reasonable inferences from the little evidence that does exist ; and some of what can be said about these problems involves a projection backward from the activities of later Muftis and will therefore be considered in greater detail in later sections .
14 This involves a move away from the traditional form of centralised bureaucratic administration and will inevitably meet with resistance from those at the centre who seek control .
15 Musically , the LP represents a step forward from both his previous work and the churning noise and verbal violence of Da Lench Mob 's ‘ Guerillas In The Mist ’ ( first release on his Street Knowledge label ) .
16 The most significant aspect of the New Historicism , political questions apart , is that it represents a move away from the contextless , intensive concentration on particular texts equally characteristic of the New Criticism , classical structuralism , and deconstruction .
17 The comment voiced from apparently everywhere is that workwear represents a move away from Eighties designer flash : away from all the heavily-labelled , non-hard-wearing , too-clever-by-half , over-styled garbage .
18 The separation of these various powers between three officers has been criticised as likely to lead to a confusion of managerial authority ( Leach 1989:118 ) , and certainly it represents a move away from the chief executive model advocated in the Bains Report .
19 The new scheme will include a fastfood restaurant , farm shop , picnic area , toilets and car park if it gets the go ahead from councillors .
20 Peter takes the arrow away from me .
21 wants to be a success , it did , it takes the subsidy away from
22 The only thing that unites these three arrangements is that in each case a minority class rules and takes the surplus away from the producers .
23 ROS takes the letter gently from him . )
24 This is a bit like what happens when one fires a rocket upward from the surface of the earth .
25 That 's how life is , though it takes a boy away from his home .
26 The etymology here could well indicate the contact during sleep between the living and the dead , in which case sleep may be regarded as a miniature death that takes a person away from the conscious life of the day .
27 Perry extricates himself and takes a chair across from us .
28 The best thing about publishing is that it takes a book away from you and kills it .
29 The stretch pulls the bone away from its perfect-fit socket — maybe just a millimetre .
30 Modernist painting , as theorists as diverse as Adorno , Greenberg ( 1983 ) , and Wollheim ( 1980 ) have observed , draws the attention away from reality and to the picture surface itself , to the systematic development of possibilities in the aesthetic material .
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