Example sentences of "which [pron] [vb -s] from " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Which no-one escapes from ;
2 Pointing to gaps in our knowledge , which itself comes from adequate understanding of sociological theory , is one of the most important parts of social research and brings out clearly the importance of the research worker having a good background of theory .
3 In the third and highest phase of development the child understands the way in which she differs from and is interdependent with the outside world , and once again feels ‘ at home ’ in the world .
4 Jane Austen may seem in Sense and Sensibility to join with Edward in preferring cottages in good repair , even at the cost of the picturesque ; but on another occasion , in Northanger Abbey , she appears to side with Catherine , who is so delighted by the view of ‘ a sweet little cottage ’ among apple trees which she sees from the windows of the parsonage at Woodston that her enthusiasm even saves it from demolition .
5 The group , which she directs from the harpsichord , specialise in 18th Century music which they play on period instruments .
6 All the clarity and detail which Griffith managed to find is there , but there is also body and warmth which one remembers from the original 78s .
7 We may define ‘ egoism ’ as the principle of acting only for the goals to which one inclines from one 's own viewpoint , and suggest two directions from which it might be approached .
8 Before that it is worth reiterating Althusser 's holistic view of the individual , and introducing an analogy which he takes from Marx .
9 The answer is clear : it owes to the biological presuppositions which he takes from Aristotle .
10 There are poems to Rosa which he takes from the trash .
11 ‘ Ferkin ell , ’ he says , in a special humorous artificial voice which he uses from time to time with Phil , to ward off jokes he has not entirely understood .
12 These can be thought of in terms of seven organizational imperatives , which he derives from a larger set constructed by Jacques ( 1989 ) .
13 The ease with which he passes from provincial gaucheries to suave Franco-Italianate portraiture , which made him painter to King George III , is fully recorded .
14 Stories for de Man are , like Rousseau 's parable and Proust 's image , metalingual allegories , and this accounts for the ease with which he passes from specific examples to general rules about language .
15 ‘ Dialectic ’ is a term which he borrows from Hegel but which he uses in a very different sense to Hegel 's .
16 In order to do this Althusser arms himself with a method for dealing with his material which he borrows from hermeneutics .
17 Of the covenants by the tenant running with the land that " to pay rent or taxes " and " not to assign or underlet , " and by the landlord running with the reversion , " to renew the lease " are the most apposite of the instances which he quotes from decided cases .
18 The buyer of the contract has made 100 profit which he receives from the seller of the contract .
19 For Schiller , Greek tragedy poses a problem which he approaches from the point of view of Kantian ethics .
20 His ‘ Dirty toys ’ , as he describes his arrangements of battered dolls and stuffed animals which he rescues from thrift shops , were included in last autumn 's ‘ Objects for the Ideal Home ’ at the Serpentine Gallery and in the Hayward Gallery 's recent ‘ Doubletake ’ , but neither occasion gave a complete or convincing account of the range of his interests .
21 He embarked on his hobby three years ago and sells examples at modest prices to recover the cost of materials , some of which he buys from America and Germany .
22 Urry terms this ‘ class-struggle ’ , which he differentiates from ‘ classes-in-struggle ’ within civil society .
23 This is why he calls the object of his study ‘ narrative discourse ’ , which he defines as ‘ the oral or written discourse which undertakes to tell of an event or a series of events ’ , and which he distinguishes from narrative as series of events ( story ) , and narrative as the act of narrating .
24 He does not , however , explain why the causal influence of the forces of production is always , and necessarily , greater than that of individuals , and only takes up this point in a second argument , in which he shifts from the discussion of character traits to consider the role played by individuals of extraordinary talent .
25 His article is particularly valuable for the evidence which he adduces from contemporary documents , some of which is of considerable importance in helping to determine the facts of Molla Fenari 's life ; but much of what he says is , as will be shown , based on so little genuine historical evidence ( insofar as this can be judged from the sources he quotes ) and appears so speculative that it must be treated with some caution .
26 This object may be something which he sees from a distance and so gives the rider due warning that he will probably shy .
27 It will be argued that one of the central features of the business company is the way in which it centralizes the authority to manage the capital which it aggregates from its investors in the hands of corporate managers .
28 The rufous humming-bird , like the golden-winged sunbird , feeds on nectar , which it takes from a territory of about 60–4000 flowers .
29 At this point the rate at which iodine passes from CCl4 to water equals the rate at which it passes from water to CCl4.
30 There can not be a moment from which it passes from the class of invalid into that of valid covenants " .
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