Example sentences of "from the [adv] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | By reducing the need to handle a complicated system , time is released from the already tight schedules for pupils to develop skills through a process whereby creative association and opportunities to learn and think are highly valued . |
2 | In any case , she was completely different from the generously curved blondes Nathan Bryce was usually seen with . |
3 | killed whilst CO of No Squadron ) got a few of us together and suggested that we made a time-and-distance run from the seemingly everlasting fires of Rotterdam to the target — a large troop concentration some 35 miles away . |
4 | In that sense they might be seen to be moving in a different direction from the strongly centralist initiatives in connection with the national curriculum . |
5 | from the historically high levels reached in 1989 and 1990 is forecast . |
6 | Even then our marker point will have preserved for us a stability in stratigraphical nomenclature and will have saved us from the utterly wasteful vacillations in opinion and fashion that trouble us today . |
7 | These are stories written well within calculated limits and those limits include a certain simplistic idea of heroism , unaffected either by irony or by a variation of mood , an idea very different from the intensely human variables in the adult novels by Conrad and Masefield which I have already discussed . |
8 | It has recently been suggested that the scale and many-sidedness of working-class militancy at the end of the Great War reflects a partial shift away from the profoundly defensive characteristics of working-class culture . |
9 | In Alessio Rospigliosi had already turned away from the heavily exploited areas of classical mythology and Christian epic to open up the unpromising vein of hagiology ; he now struck an infinitely more successful one . |
10 | So , when Thurstan arrived in England in 1121 with papal letters threatening with excommunication any who resisted his admission into England , the monks of Canterbury recited the primatial phrases from the newly enlarged documents and refrained from taking further action for the time being . |
11 | This applies also to the British Council , our arm of cultural diplomacy , which is facing unprecedented demands from the newly liberated countries which are looking out for English language teachers . |
12 | Does he not agree that such a programme could , amongst other things , establish an effective linkage between western support for economic development and the response from the newly independent states in terms of schedules for comprehensive , verifiable , and quicker disarmament ? |
13 | This has left an economy largely isolated from the most advanced countries , with one of the world 's highest levels of consumption per capita of energy and steel . |
14 | This year 's , which finished last week , was hailed as a great success with children from the most disadvantaged parts of the city taking part in a number of activities , including canoeing , swimming , rowing , water safety and windsurfing . |
15 | Progress came instead from testing a long sequence of compounds leading from the most potent sulphonamides to pyrimidines , a family of moderately complex organic compounds some of which are constituents of nucleic acids ( Chapter II ) , and later to guanidines . |
16 | Many of the girls come from the most appalling backgrounds of abuse and violence and approximately 60% are addicted to drugs . |
17 | Letters pour into the correspondence columns from all over — some of them from people who sound several years older than himself , and some of them from the most exclusive neighbourhoods , well beyond the pockets of any of his friends . |
18 | In 1956 we still breathed pure air , even in Athens ; the magic beauty of the countryside had not yet vanished from the most famous sites , and there was no discotheque on the islands . |
19 | Exotic nuclei have more protons or neutrons than do stable nuclei , and studies of them provide valuable information on the balance of nuclear forces when atoms deviate from the most favourable ratios of neutrons to protons . |
20 | One million people from the most crowded islands , Java and Bali , have been moved to the outer islands — Sumatra , Borneo , and Sulawesi tween 1930 and 1979 . |
21 | These monsters are collected from the most dangerous parts of the Old World by adventurers who hope to be well rewarded for their efforts . |
22 | The most remarkable thing is the way in which someone from the most privileged home in the land should strike a chord with those from the most deprived backgrounds . |
23 | CTCs offer education opportunities to children of all abilities — particularly those drawn from the most deprived parts of the cities that they serve . |
24 | The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs , from the most casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of atomic physics or even pure mathematics and logic , is a man-made fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges . |
25 | These articles were drawn from the most recent issues . |
26 | We had been taking into the adult wards men and women suffering from the most serious fevers , encephalitis lethargica , polio-encephalitis , serious poliomyelitis , with two ‘ Iron lung ’ cases in a special isolation ward and unit , tuberculous meningitis , and poliomeningitis were also with us . |
27 | If the countries of the poor world are to escape from the most serious forms of dependence , and if they are to get the best social and economic benefit from their resources , it is essential that they have control over their resources . |
28 | Yes , I mean , any protectionism , right will reallocate resources , alright , away from the most efficient uses of resources and toward inefficient uses of resources . |
29 | And other astronomers , notably the Royal Observatory in Edinburgh , have used infra-red detectors to locate the very faint light from the most distant galaxies . |
30 | The resulting " Ohmannized " Faulkner consists of a sequence of short , atomic sentences , not far removed from the most elementary sentences , or KERNEL sentences , " postulated by the theory of Transformational Grammar that Ohmann uses . |