Example sentences of "from the [noun pl] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Of course , these single-employer estates are not closed social fields : indeed , social networks extend outwards from the estates to include other colleagues employed by the same company who live elsewhere in Dunrossness , and perhaps also include a few Shetlanders perceived as having an equal social status .
2 By far the most popular parts of the speech , to go from the reactions reported by the SD , were those in which Hitler , claiming new plenipotentiary powers , attacked judges and civil servants and threatened draconian measures to root out corruption and parasitic privilege whatever the rank and status of those involved .
3 It 's all this oil from the boilers leaking on to her into her soil and out into the ditch .
4 Many lords profited from the tolls charged on travellers and merchandise , and their castles were often sited at points where roads or rivers met , and where merchants and pilgrims congregated .
5 But sometimes a site where classical ruins have been found can be identified from the coins found there , since most cities made small amounts of bronze coinage which tended to circulate in their immediate vicinity .
6 If x contains all the free variables that the finite program P ever inputs or assigns to , then there is an c — IF/ALT program P' such that free unc and P=P' is provable from the laws presented in section 1 .
7 The second objection was that in recognising such a right of recovery , the House of Lords would overstep the boundary that separated the legitimate development of the law by judges from the laws developed by legislation .
8 Duelling , one index of the survival of the values of barbarism , had been forbidden in the British Army since 1844 , but the Russian officer corps was specially exempted from the laws prohibiting it .
9 The Committee 's interests are broad , ranging from the laws affecting works of art , religious objects and archaeological finds to those affecting the preservation of architecture , the legal problems of museums and the maintenance of freedom of speech .
10 His younger days saw him helping with cubs and scouts and he 's is so popular that already residents and storekeepers from the villages have started a fund to help him'
11 Nor did they differ essentially from the principles contained in Brezhnev 's 1969 proposal on Asian collective security .
12 Ted convinced himself that the sounds came from the birds nesting in the eaves or the rafters and banged the walls nth a brush .
13 She had taken the trouble first to find out what she could about the topic from the notes given , and had thought about it carefully , so that in a real sense she was herself involved in what was happening in the classroom .
14 Perhaps she had never quite recovered from the efforts to please she had made then .
15 I have suggested in this article that an influential forum of scholars , critics and performers in England has felt a pervasive desire to direct a good deal of medieval and Renaissance music away from the ‘ medieval/Renaissance group ’ ( a tradition which has come to seem increasingly hollow , even bogus , to members of the forum ) and towards the best voices to emerge from the chapels attached to the Oxbridge colleges where , almost without exception , the members of the forum received their higher education .
16 According to ancient Gothic legend , duergars sprang from the maggots eating the flesh of the giant YMIR , and fled into the ground when the first light broke .
17 Soon they become aware that the train is engaged on a steady climb , this section being popularly known as the Long Drag ; beyond Horton in Ribblesdale Station interest tends to flag a little as the outlook from the windows becomes more austere on the pull up to Ribblehead .
18 The night had turned rough and the rattle from the windows had seemed to be emphasised by the silence during supper .
19 With the cooperation of their management , staff unfurled a banner from the windows saying something like ‘ Liz , leave your queens alone ’ .
20 The baleful light from the windows cast trembling shadows towards the IMC logo .
21 The benevolent influence of a family , such as that depicted in the first chapter of Tom Brown 's Schooldays , reached out to the tenants and other members of the local community ; the girls from the cottages came into the big house as dairy or nursery-maids ; the boys were taken on as under-gardeners or grooms .
22 It is a view from the terraces written by a fan who has spent a lifetime supporting two of the world 's great lost causes , the Scotland national team and St Johnstone FC .
23 A photo-feature illustrated a collection of domestic receivers from the 1950s–60s located at the Bampton Museum of Communication and Domestic and Local History in Devon .
24 At the other extreme , many historians believe that the Labour Party had simply inherited working-class support from the Liberals owing to the fact that trade unions had changed their allegiance when it became obvious that only an independent Labour Party would act in their interests .
25 I would talk about the call to the WTN office in Beirut saying that John was OK , and tell them that Sontag 's sighting of Brian showed that silence from the kidnappers did n't necessarily mean that a hostage was dead .
26 Profits from the concerts went to the RAF Benevolent Fund amd tp RAFA Welfare Funds .
27 The machineheads are in the older Kluson style , with incredibly convenient slotted string posts for tucking those unwieldy string ends into , thus protecting oneself from the horrors associated with hypodermic guitar string injury .
28 Once training is underway the glycogen is gradually removed from the muscles to produce energy and is replaced by blood , that is the muscles are ‘ pumped ’ .
29 The price reduction initially requested may be substantial and may be designed to provoke a reaction from the vendors to test their minimum price and their negotiating strength at this late stage ( i.e. whether they are irrevocably committed to the deal ) .
30 The expression " breach of warranty " is often used in disputes about deferred consideration , when vendors are said in the agreement to " warrant " that the profits reach a specified figure , and the purchasers seek a repayment from the vendors to compensate them for that loss , in most cases calculated on a pre-agreed formula : if the profits exceed the specified figure , the vendors may be entitled to additional consideration .
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