Example sentences of "the [adj] [adj] from " in BNC.
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1 | The long-range type will succeed the British swingfire and the Franco-German Hot from the mid-1990s . |
2 | Until the watershed of 1979 , few restraints on a Home Secretary 's freedom of action in the mainstream stemmed from the political ideology of his party or ministerial colleagues . |
3 | The 20 teams were put into four pools , with the top two from each going on to the quarter-finals . |
4 | The event lasted all day , with two heats of ten teams , the top three from each going on to the final . |
5 | The only exception is the US PGA Championship , whose committee invited the top 50 from the Sony Rankings and must be applauded for doing so . |
6 | The Masters event in Eastbourne brought together the top 24 from the circuit ( determined by how many circuit points they had accumulated ) as competition intensified and world computer points were not to be contested . |
7 | Note the gradual slope of the Top Carboniferous from its outcrop in the south down below an increasing cover with Cretaceous sediments towards the north within the Münsterland . |
8 | Clearly , it is the concentrated and closed narrative form of the feature film that is out of line , a rupture within a generic tradition of the popular novelistic from which television 's mutations are more continuous . |
9 | Are the British different from other Nations ? |
10 | Each of the remaining 60,15 from each township , were asked whether they had been in contact with any of our list of ten agencies during the same prevalence study period . |
11 | Similar features can be observed with the fate of linear plasmids bearing Tetrahymena telomeres in P. anserina : autonomous linear replication occurs in only 50-70% of the transformants , the remaining resulting from integration events into chromosomal DNA ( 1 ) . |
12 | Then taking a pencil , trace out onto the arm the correct line of the front and side faces of the joint direct from the back . |
13 | The western half of the village over the river Derwent was the scene of the annual fair from about 1200 until the early 20th century . |
14 | There has been a new development in the struggle to keep the Antarctic free from all mining and oil development . |
15 | Since citizenship has become a fashionable and acceptable word , it is easy to slip into the habit of using it in preference to ‘ individual rights ’ or ‘ human rights ’ , but it is important to bear in mind the desirability of keeping the private sphere of the life of the individual separate from his role as citizen , an essentially political role and status . |
16 | Despite occasional lapses ( like the 100kg of highly enriched uranium that went missing in the early 1960s from a factory in Pennsylvania ) the system has not failed catastrophically . |
17 | I learnt their use in the early 1970s from Dr P B L Muldoon , physician at the North Staffordshire Hospital Centre , and have personally used them since 1974–5 . |
18 | The same bombast , one suspects based on the same sense of uncertainty , was to be heard in the early 1990s from those who would have ‘ discipline ’ imposed from abroad and unrelated to the needs of the domestic economy . |
19 | To cross the Atlantic in the early Fifties from the modest hopes of Britain to the United , Euphoric , You-name-it-they-had-it States was to court vertigo . |
20 | The rise in wheat consumption slowed markedly since the early 1980s from an increase of 3.5 per cent a year to an average increase of only 2.4 per cent a year . |
21 | I had joined Thames Valley back in the early eighties from London Irish . |
22 | The well tested at 69 million standard cubic feet a day — double the previous best from a fracced vertical well in the field and 10 times that achieved by a non-fracced vertical well . |
23 | First , different ideals of the good far from being excluded will form the starting points of the argument about a doctrine of justice . |
24 | The good imported from the union partner is now tariff-free and lower in price to domestic consumers than the tariff-laden import from the rest of the world . |
25 | ONE OF the doughty pack leaders to emerge in the late 1940's from the Manchester scrum of ‘ palaeomagnetists ’ was S , Keith Runcorn — a former Cambridge engineer with an almost unhealthy liking for the rough and tumble of the rugby field , Keith Runcorn is now professor of physics , and geophysics supremo , at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne — and incidentally the president of the university 's rugby club , To honour Runcorn 's reaching the age of 60 , the university organised earlier this month a three-day conference on ‘ Magnetism , planetary rotation and convection in the Solar System ’ , Since the Second World War , geology has undergone conceptual upheavals as never before , The apparently ludicrous ideas proposed by Alfred Wegener in the 1920s , that the Earth 's continents were drifting around , have found solid ground , The evidence came from physicists inspired by wartime work on radar , by cosmic-ray research and the discovery that some rotating stars have a magnetic field , The physicists set themselves the task of measuring whether rotating bodies on Earth also produce magnetic fields , The eminent Patrick Maynard Blackett devised a highly sensitive magnetometer for this work , but finding that a spinning gold cylinder produced no magnetic field , turned his machine to measuring rock magnetism , A school of expertise concerned with ‘ fossilised magnetism ’ developed around him at Manchester and later at Imperial College , London , The fruits of such work inspired a reappraisal of continental drift and new theories to explain the mechanisms responsible for moving the continents , and later produced the foundations on which were forged the unifying concepts of plate tectonics and seafloor spreading , Runcorn applies an enormous enthusiasm to all that he takes on — as many past students and editors of various science journals can testify , His first notoriety came with his attempts to determine whether the Earth 's general magnetic field was related to the planet 's rotation , or related to some deep-seated phenomenon , To determine this he took his magnetometer down some of the deep Lancashire coal pits . |
26 | The case of the chainmaking trade was particularly acute because of the large numbers of women who entered it during the late 1870s from nailmaking . |
27 | While in France there were signs of a reassessment of the building programme ( which was reduced in the late 1980s from 15,000 to 13,000 new places ) the expansion in the United States has continued unabated . |
28 | The numerically dominant stratum of unskilled labour encompassed and eventually unified two distinct traditions which were related to the origins of their members , namely , rural labour from the depressed eastern counties and the casual poor from East London . |
29 | The motor is operated from a chopper drive with 100 Y dc supply and with the current varying from a minimum of 1.9A to a maximum of 2. 1A . |
30 | Essentially , of course , a freehold is seen as an appreciating asset the value of which can be realised for the benefit of the firm free from tax ( where the proceeds of sale are reinvested in other firm property ) . |