Example sentences of "from the [noun] [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 | The degree of fire protection needed is reduced as the distance from the boundary increases until no protection is needed ( i.e. external walls may consist entirely of unprotected area ) . |
3 | This tourniquet is released before the needle is withdrawn from the vein to prevent the back-pressure which has built up from causing the blood to spurt out and form a bruise . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | It 's all this oil from the boilers leaking on to her into her soil and out into the ditch . |
6 | KPMG has authorisation from the ICAEW to carry on all investment business except discretionary management . |
7 | Many towns had to rely on immigration from the country to maintain even a reduced level of population , and the easing of pressure of population on the land in the country reduced the urge on men to move , although as we have seen in our examination of rural society men did continue to leave the land to escape the burdens of serfdom ( 70 ; 104 , pp.206–10 ; Ch.4 ) . |
8 | He did n't have to get to know a new city like the boys from the country did . |
9 | Barnardo 's ‘ Positive Options ’ or a social worker from the home finding unit of your local social services department can give you more information about how this might work . |
10 | Today a letter from the council offered them a home of their own . |
11 | He said : ‘ We have three buses every hour on that route and figures from the council show the average number of passengers is three . ’ |
12 | However the executive staff could receive changed instructions from the Council acting collectively , which amounts to more than the member States acting collectively through their delegates . |
13 | A statement from the council described the £4.5m estimate as ‘ totally unacceptable ’ . |
14 | There will be a report coming through because the chap from the council believe it or not , said , Oh this should be undercover . |
15 | But last Friday he was astonished to receive a letter from the council saying a liability order had been granted by the magistrates and demanding payment of the £60 , together with £15 court costs . |
16 | But after her refusal , Carol has received a letter from the council saying it has ‘ discharged itself of the responsibility of rehousing her as a homeless person ’ . |
17 | Whilst I was working for the council , someone came to ask and we had some new o new officer appointed and he was very worried about getting ca er p permission from the council to launch a sewer scheme that was going to cost a quarter of a million pounds , a very large amount in those days . |
18 | As Craig slowly recovers one thing that really upsets his parents is that no-one from the council has bothered to see them about the accident or to ask how craig is : |
19 | A recorded message from the service told her : ‘ There is no one here at present . |
20 | Consider , for instance , the ability of the male praying mantis to continue copulating whilst the female steadily devours him from the head end downwards , or for the head end of a wasp to continue eating even when severed from the abdomen . |
21 | A brilliant last bowl removed two of Gourlay 's woods from the head to give Corsie the three shots he needed to take the set 7-6 . |
22 | This membrane then fuses with the membrane of a cell body called a lysosome and the virus is eventually released from the lysosome to initiate infection ( see New Scientist , 10 February , p 372 ) . |
23 | The panic which followed Mr Nigel Lawson 's departure from the Treasury has subsided , but tremors have been produced this week by tabloid press reports that Mr Nicholas Ridley , the Trade Secretary , regards Mrs Thatcher as a liability , leaving only four solid loyalists in Cabinet — Mr John Major , Mr David Waddington , Mr Cecil Parkinson and Mr Norman Lamont . |
24 | But the Government has pledged that all bills will be met , and extra funds have already been secured from the Treasury to pay for reconstruction . |
25 | FORECASTS from the Treasury have been proved to be hopelessly wrong which is one reason why the economy now seems to be in Freefall , leading to the closure of hundreds of Factories . |
26 | The single page has obviously been torn away from the Treasury tag that once attached it to its fellows and there is no sign of the promised annexes . |
27 | ‘ Standard operating procedure , ’ Husband said , quickly smoothing over Sim 's full-frontal use of the word ‘ money ’ , even though there was nobody there from the Treasury to hear it . |
28 | Mr Hayden Phillips is moving from the Treasury to become permanent secretary in the new Department of National Heritage . |
29 | 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 . |
30 | IFN γ binds to a 95 kDa cell surface receptor which is present on most cell lines that have been tested and is distinct from the receptor mediating the actions of the IFN αs and IFN β . |