Example sentences of "[det] [conj] from " in BNC.

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1 The suggestion is that the spiral possesses the capacity to move energy from one level to another or from one vibration to another — to act as a channel or interface .
2 This is not surprising , given the difficulties encountered in developing them , but it does limit the ease with which we can generalize from one experiment to another or from experiments to the real world .
3 The basis of these systems was the allocation of credit points to parts of courses so that candidates could move from one course to another or from one centre to another and carry credit for past achievement , where that achievement was relevant to the new course .
4 To succeed , individuals will need tremendous flexibility to be able to move from one company to another or from one industry to another .
5 It was because the moment of decision was approaching that they were up here on the hill of Dumyat , six miles from Thorfinn 's muster-point at Dunblane , and half that from the crag on the Forth beside which , on one side or another , Thorfinn would take his stand against any Northumbrian advance out of Lothian .
6 From this and from the particle 's measured lifetime , physicists at CERN have deduced that there are only three families of fundamental particles .
7 A target figure is reached for the total stock within each interest category , and the annual replacement figure is calculated from this and from examining the range of depreciation factors at work on the stock .
8 As Welsh coal became available he also purchased this and from his Truro base endeavoured to set up a monopoly of the local fuel business .
9 asserted that in the present time the defendant 's liability in Rylands v. Fletcher itself ‘ could simply have been placed on the defendant 's failure of duty to take reasonable care , ’ and it seems a logical inference from this and from the judgment as a whole that the Court of Appeal considered the rule to have no useful function in modern times .
10 The action was taken on grounds of conducting unauthorised business and making unsolicited calls and misleading statements , SIB said , and prevents LWI and from continuing to do this and from disposing or dealing with any assets .
11 Many are changing jobs and moving from one town to another and from large cities to smaller towns .
12 The extent of the surrender varies from one person to another , and the assumptions about the claim to privacy also vary — not only from one person to another within a given group or society , but from one society to another and from one historical period to another .
13 He noticed how they took chairs at some distance from one another and from him .
14 Again there is marked variation from one person to another and from one week to another in the amount of dream sleep that we get .
15 In this way , as a result of crossing-over the haploid gametes are different from one another and from the parental .
16 Unlike the Church of England , Nonconformity suffered not from too few but from too many candidates .
17 This has shown that the Government is incapable of keeping its word , not just from one election to another but from one day to the next . ’
18 Tricia is researching dance bands of that era and would like to hear from anyone who remembers this columnist-and from anyone who played in a band in those days .
19 She knew not whether from eating too much or from her period .
20 The distribution of the wreckage was such that from the position of the outer wing panels more than two kilometres from the main wreckage it was clear that there had been a structural failure of both wings in the air .
21 The relations between the elements must be such that from any three of the elements the fourth can be uniquely determined .
22 From total instinct as much as from injury I lay as dead .
23 Of the 53 farmers ( 35% ) who chose evenings for the 3 hour course , 21 ( 40% ) agreed that they might not gain full benefit from an evening course and 32 ( 60% ) felt that they would gain as much as from a day time course .
24 He draws and paints from his flayed nerves as much as from his baulked emotions .
25 You are expressing your personal responses , and speaking from the heart as much as from the head , so there is no need to try and paint an apparently ‘ objective ’ picture with appeal to the intellect .
26 In the end , the understandings we have offered here came about indirectly from the actual learning process itself and contact with the deaf community as much as from the direct questioning we felt necessary at the initial stage .
27 Malcolm was followed by his red-haired brother William ‘ the Lion ’ ( from the beast on his standard as much as from his personal courage ) , instigator of the first of so many attempts over the centuries to form a binding union with France against the English .
28 Taking a mineral-water lunch with your colleagues in a secluded senior executive dining room can divorce you from the real contributors as much as from the contribution you seek .
29 More than ever , Paris is the cultural centre of Europe and I go there maybe six times a year for ideas and inspiration , from the shops and the street as much as from the fashion companies .
30 I entreat you both That , being of so young days brought up with him And sith so neighboured to his youth and haviour That you vouchsafe your rest here in our court Some little time , so by your companies To draw him on to pleasures , and to gather So much as from occasion you may glean , Whether aught to us unknown afflicts him thus , That opened lies within our remedy .
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