Example sentences of "often [verb] from " in BNC.
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1 | Perhaps this is not so surprising , since the nation 's pet population often suffer from similar complaints to those of their owners . |
2 | More severely handicapped people often suffer from physical as well as mental disabilities . |
3 | Newly imported fish often suffer from external parasites , such as anchor worm and flukes , which standard dealer practices will remove before the Koi goes on sale . |
4 | The process described is common : women who often suffer from low self-esteem , frustrated creativity or an inability to assert themselves can — subconsciously at least — look for someone who will express confidence , arrogance , purposefulness , ambition and success . |
5 | Clearly , the members of the Cabinet without departmental responsibilities are expected to help to resolve this problem , but they often suffer from a sense of being outsiders without the detailed departmental briefs possessed by their colleagues . |
6 | Yes — one of the many reasons dogs often suffer from nutritional problems ( resulting in too much weight , lack of vitality , a poor coat , and diarrhoea ) is that a canned food diet is not adequate . |
7 | They claim the animals often suffer from deformities and illnesses , and bitches are shot when they 're no longer able to produce puppies . |
8 | But this had been increasingly called into question : women campaigned for equality , divorced people and unmarried parents became more assertive , and theologians showed that what had been claimed as universal truths often arose from particular cultures and societies . |
9 | For many upper-class men , prostitution appeared both necessary and inevitable ; and their objections to raising the age of consent often arose from the fear that either they or their sons might be threatened by new legislation . |
10 | Such thefts often arose from grants of benefices known as precariae ( from preces , the " prayer " or " request " which had to be offered by the recipient ) on church lands . |
11 | However , since so few children attended some of these types of school , d is often calculated from proportions at the extremes of the scale ; if we rank the class exclusivity of schools on the basis of the magnitude of the d s , we seem to be told that the secondary moderns were the most selective , followed by the grammar schools . |
12 | In a major survey of special needs provision in middle and secondary schools , Clunies-Ross and Wimhurst ( 1983 ) showed that children with special needs were most often withdrawn from science and modern languages in order to find the time to give them extra help with literacy . |
13 | As I have said earlier , we all need encouragement and often remarks from the most unexpected quarters are the most gratifying . |
14 | Ageist assumptions connecting old age with ill-health can often arise from the extreme social isolation and withdrawal experienced by many older people , the self-neglect that this can cause , and the illness that then arises from this neglect . |
15 | Obviously personal inclination is very important , but personal inclination can often arise from having been taught by an exceptional teacher , or having a scientist parent who helps with homework . |
16 | Requests are often received from Doctors , Hospitals , Social Workers , or from a friend or neighbour who knows of someone who may benefit from the service . |
17 | Typically , the broad changes are gradual , the addition or subtraction of a handful of courses or course combinations in any one year , the first usually reflecting potential student demand or research developments , and the second often stemming from resource and staffing problems . |
18 | The birds were often marched from there ( a distance of more than 100 miles ) to be sold at London markets and , as it was such a lengthy journey , their feet were protected by small , leather boots , or with a coating of tar . |
19 | Agency enforcement is often criticized from this perspective as scant and ineffective , with the agencies captured by the interests they seek to control . |
20 | As a holder , a banker would want to know the terms and conditions of the carrier from whom he will be claiming the goods , especially since these terms and conditions often change from one bill of lading to the next . |
21 | Dolomite is often distinguished from calcite by its failure to stain with solutions which react with calcite ( see below ) . |
22 | This is the thesis that women 's morality , which in certain vital respects , particularly in relation to sexual behaviour , often differs from men 's , has been imposed on them by centuries of conditioning by men . |
23 | Nothing snide or loaded here but enough to set a high Tory and paternalistic tone not often heard from the platform at recent Conservative conferences . |
24 | He could tell she was upset by the words she used : bad words he had often heard from the men who worked with the pigs or came to the house to drink with Buddie in the music-room . |
25 | Hence the excuse often heard from a student ‘ But I am sure that I learnt that in the school ! ’ |
26 | Most frequent call resembles a rather feeble but high-pitched Herring , ‘ kee-ya ’ , also has a gobbling ‘ kak-kak-kak ’ , often heard from flocks on migration in spring . |
27 | Something was being born inside them , as if the past and future were coupling to breed a new kind of man , and it seemed to them that the wind was whispering a phrase they had often heard from Bakayoko : ‘ The kind of man we were is dead , and our only hope for a new life lies in the machine , which knows neither language nor a race . ’ … |
28 | He left when he was eighteen , presumably with the cry so often heard from those who look for instant wisdom in courses designed primarily to foster skills by which such discrimination may be attained : " the course can not give me what I am looking for " . |
29 | The satraps often revolted from the Great King , but when Alexander invaded , they fought to repel him . |
30 | The reined-in impatience which so often emanated from Ian was absent , Theodora 's gravitas mitigated and Julia 's social nervousness sedated . |