Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] have [adv] [vb pp] from " in BNC.

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1 Economic activities have steadily moved from the villages and the rural communities into the towns and the urban areas ; and as employment opportunities have diminished in the rural areas , the village population have moved into the towns
2 This driver has just returned from France , after managing to get through the blockade .
3 Agriculture has fewer and fewer workers to give up to industry or the tertiary sector , and short-term migrant or daily labour has steadily declined from a peak in the 1960s .
4 This group had already trekked from Pochala on the Ethiopian border ; some of the boys had been living a transitory existence for four years .
5 He felt suddenly light , as though the burden of the last few days had suddenly lifted from his shoulders .
6 Most of the early topics for review , such as debtor management , payment systems and self-billing , were selected by head office , but as confidence in the technique has grown , suggestions for further reviews have increasingly come from individual sites ; programme and project management and risk evaluation in project appraisals are examples .
7 The number of field social workers has also increased from 2,985 to 4,700 , an increase of 47 per cent .
8 Further support for this concept has recently come from the work of Iftikhar et al who showed higher concentrations of bile in oesophageal aspirates from patients with Barrett 's columnar lined lower oesophagus .
9 Nine of the 12 patients had also suffered from ulcerative colitis for 8 years ( range 0–21 years ) and one had non-specific colitis .
10 In the nineteenth century a comparatively high proportion of the population was aware of its own mortality ; today this sense has almost vanished from everyday life .
11 Is my right hon. Friend aware that a delegation from the Inter-Parliamentary Union has just returned from Russia and the Ukraine ?
12 Popular music has thus dissolved from a specifically youth-oriented product at the margins of society into a new type of industry which effectively draws areas that were previously considered private and ‘ hidden ’ in our society into the centre of consumption and governmental strategy .
13 This certainty had somehow emerged from her indecision .
14 A GROUP of British students has recently returned from a trip to South America , where they have been researching into the flora and fauna of the Colombian Amazon basin .
15 A smallish property close to the Piazza della Repubblica , this hotel has recently benefited from an extensive refurbishment programme and has a new and modern feel .
16 Do you truly believe that this country has really benefited from the importation of blacks , Asians etc ?
17 Such enthusiasm may have had as much to do with the excited nationalism of wartime , as any substantial appreciation of these films ' merits , and it should not be supposed that British filmmakers had universally gone from being dull and unimaginative to become masters of the cinematic art .
18 If zoom shots have dated , multiple images and split-screen effects have long disappeared from regular use .
19 Extra income has also come from bank interest earned on appeal funds already deposited .
20 Such calls have also come from supranational bodies , in particular the OECD and the UN .
21 Last year , only two salmon climbed Idaho Lower Granite Dam compared with 4,500 in 1950. 100 sub-species have already disappeared from the two rivers and the Shoshone-Bannock native American tribe , the National Marine Fisheries Service and conservation groups have petitioned to have the remaining species listed .
22 The study now reported began with the author recognising from an examination of the name ‘ Forsey ’ that although the second syllable had obviously developed from the Anglo-Saxon haeg ( with the noun prefix ge ) and the Middle English hei/hey , meaning enclosure , it seemed unlikely that the first syllables fors and furs were descended from the same root word , and the fact that Dr Reaney had cited widely separated counties for their ( rather late ) emergence was a further slight pointer .
23 The Liberal Democrats have finally emerged from the puppet-masters ' box , but the crowds in the streets may decide they have left it too left .
24 Three spurs have also come from late levels : they are uncommon finds on Romano-British sites and suggest the presence of a cavalry unit here in the late fourth century .
25 Perhaps the most compelling confirmation has however come from Pacione ( 1980 ) and his study of the ‘ metropolitan village ’ of Milton of Campsie to the northeast of Glasgow .
26 Organic chemistry has also profited from matrix isolation techniques .
27 Previous expeditions had often collected from disease-free trees in the forest , but only a few of these trees had shown useful resistance in later trials .
28 But none of these volunteers has yet come from those screened out — only 27 have volunteered out of the 4,000 who have gone through the process and been found not to be refugees , ’ he told the Sunday Express .
29 The white elephant had finally emerged from the confusion behind which its promoters had concealed it for so many years .
30 His Jewish mother had narrowly escaped from Romania in the 19305 when the local Iron Guard goon squad began slaughtering Jews with a barbarity which sickened even their Nazi German allies .
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