Example sentences of "from one [noun] in " in BNC.

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1 Far from one poll in 20 proving a rogue , the whole 1992 election would appear to be a rogue in polling terms .
2 These follow on from Service Quality 's successful Try my Bank problem solving video which featured Richard Wilson from One Foot in the Grave .
3 They had never had an argument , apart from one occasion in 1956 , when Henry refused to wear a pair of short trousers .
4 ‘ We were receiving calls from all parts of the country and I had a call from one lady in Washington DC in the early hours of this morning .
5 Monopole and Piper Heidsieck , founded from one firm in 1785 ) and Ernest Jacquesson ( 1798 ) .
6 Er , the major contribution from one transaction in relation to West Thurrock er , which will be coming to an end er , James would you like to comment on that ?
7 The Chinese Wall is a self styled regulatory mechanism aimed at stemming the flow of material information from one department in a conglomerate to another and resolving the legal problems associated with conflicts of interest generally .
8 We can therefore generalize from one experiment in which short-term storage is believed to operate to another in which we also believe it to be present .
9 The UK obtains nearly all its niobium from one mine in Brazil .
10 Cells can also change shape , exert forces , and move from one place in the embryo to another .
11 We can , then , apply his metaphor to our studies : ‘ Thus the ‘ magic circles ’ pivot , shifting as a person moves from one place in society to another . ’
12 Thus it is possible for one of these three Conventions to apply in relation to a purely internal supply-contract in which goods move from one place in a State to another place in the same State pursuant to a contract concluded by acts of offer and acceptance entirely within that State .
13 Since either method only results in the drug changing place from one paragraph in Part I of Schedule 2 to another paragraph it has been argued that nothing has been ‘ produced ’ within the meaning of section 4 and the definition in section 37 of the Act .
14 By analogy , it may be possible to walk from one point in hilly country to another by a path which is always level or uphill , and yet a straight line between the points would cross a valley .
15 To signifies this relation of subsequence in virtue of its potential meaning of a movement from one point in time to another and has been seen to give rise to two clearly identifiable actual meanings according to whether the speaker conceives the whole movement which to is capable of signifying or only the initial part thereof .
16 This principle which is analogous to the implication of the second law of thermodynamics in relation to thermal energy , governs the energy transfers in fluvial processes , the spatial relations at any one time , and the sequence of development from one stage in geomorphic history to another .
17 None of these difficulties are likely to trouble us much in daily life , but they remain genuine difficulties none the less and raise issues of fundamental importance ; for if there can be no absolutely reliable and unequivocal criteria for deciding whether any given existent remains numerically , and not merely qualitatively , the same from one moment in time to the next , then we can not hope to be able to " define " the distinction between numerical and qualitative identity in terms of the criteria of particular-identification .
18 Yet a close analysis of the problems seemed to indicate that there could be no foolproof criteria whereby one might decide with certainty whether anything stays numerically identical from one moment in time to the next .
19 Each of the three million wires leads from one cell in the retina to the brain .
20 Figure 6 shows recordings from one patch in which Ba 2 + inhibited K + channel activity , while channel activity returned almost to the initial level after washing out Ba 2 + .
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