Example sentences of "[noun] from [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.
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31 | er , if you just to avoid doubt , it looks as though , as we presume we go back to one , three , four that 's less than the income was the revenue from things like the guest room and er the lounge and so on , you see ? |
32 | In 1991 , IBM realised $1.5bn in worldwide revenue from sales of the RS/6000 , which represented a 50% improvement over 1990 . |
33 | Bartram , 24 , who joined Bournemouth from Wolves last year , has already been the target of a £300,000 bid from Blackburn during the summer . |
34 | Club chairman Geoff Brown blamed the sacking of Totten , who took the club from obscurity to the Premier Division , on the need for a ‘ fresh approach . ’ |
35 | But neither shock treatment of that kind , nor a rallying cry from captain Julian Dicks is likely to save the East London club from relegation to the Second Division . |
36 | The final communiqué exempted Angola from implementation of the tariff reduction programme for up to three years , and from use of the clearing house for up to four years . |
37 | Although the government eventually decided to accept royalties from sales of the chip rather than to take an equity share in the company , it was widely seen as the last straw in a conflict between Fields and the administration . |
38 | Their places were taken by two Armenian jewellery traders from Baku in the southern republics . |
39 | The depute-fiscal , Alison Gibson , explained how Lawrie had collected rent from tenants at the housing estate run by the Thistle Foundation , but kept some of the cash for herself . |
40 | She was an expensive woman , all in suede , come by car from north of the river . |
41 | er it , it proved it like in America they can build a car from end of the production line to the other end , finished , running forty nine seconds |
42 | In my opinion , taken as a proportion of travelling time by persons travelling by car from employment in the Leeds conurbation to the York area , the extra involved in travelling past York on the A sixty four , is quite slight and there 's plenty of evidence that numbers of people er travel to the Leeds conurbation from the north eastern part of York by by the A sixty four regularly . |
43 | Initially there was considerable opposition from members of the faculty who feared that the proposals would undermine their own positions . |
44 | A proposal to abolish all drift net fishing in the Mediterranean was abolished after surprise opposition from Britain at the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe . |
45 | But the abiding issue of Rhodesia , still in the unilateral and technically illegal control of the minority white government of Ian Smith , despite strong black guerrilla opposition from supporters of the rival Nkomo and Mugabe factions , remained undisturbed . |
46 | The county court owes its establishment to the cost and complexity of civil procedure , which persuaded the government of the day to pass the County Courts Act 1846 against much opposition from parts of the legal profession . |
47 | CAMPAIGNERS say Darlington council 's decision to ban disabled drivers from parts of the town centre during peak periods could force them to shop elsewhere . |
48 | The Indian Supreme Court on Aug. 27 cleared the way for a resumption of investigations into allegations of high-level corruption in connection with the 1986 deal for the purchase of Bofors artillery from Sweden for the Indian army [ see p. 37184 ] . |
49 | Most traders , by the middle of this week , were still waiting for confirmation from maltsters on the accurate nitrogen tests . |
50 | This in turn strips aluminium from clay in the soil to form aluminium hydroxide . |
51 | Bernard Ulrich and colleagues at the University of Gottingen had proposed that deposition of sulphur and nitrogen compounds ( originating from industrial activity and power generation ) led to the release of aluminium from minerals in the soil . |
52 | A dozen men move back and forth , putting up lights in the living-room , shifting all the furniture round , and accepting trays of tea from Felicity in the kitchen . |
53 | In fact , as he later admitted in court , he had been represented by a lawyer from Newcastle at the time of signing to Virgin : not a music-business lawyer , it was true , but a lawyer none the less . |
54 | The Slovenes and some Croats had been converted during the time of Charlemagne , and the Croats of Dalmatia were converted by missionaries from Rome during the early seventh century . |
55 | Until they supplemented it by jadeite from Burma during the eighteenth century , the Chinese relied on nephrite . |
56 | Owing to pressure of work , Brush evidently purchased sixteen body shells from U.E.C. for the larger cars , which they fitted out and trucked themselves at Loughborough . |
57 | In fact , by the mid-1970s , Karajan 's reputation and authority were such that he was to become a central player in effecting the greatest of all musico-technological revolutions of our times , the switch from LP to the laser-tracking compact disc . |
58 | The actual flow of funds from government to the industry represented by loans , grants and tax allowances has been minimal , at least since the late 1950s . |
59 | Firstly , there must at least once have been a flow of funds from savers to the trust and on to borrowers , when the trust was first established . |
60 | ‘ My brief is to channel funds from Britain into the Province . |