Example sentences of "[vb -s] from the [noun sg] of [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | It probably results from the break-up of treponemes in response to the penicillin , with release of substances into the bloodstream and locally which have an inflammatory potential . |
2 | That is to say , his explanation of long waves lies in technological change which results from the bunching of innovations made by entrepreneurs . |
3 | The meaning of a typical sentence in a natural language is complex in that it results from the combination of meanings which are in some sense simpler . |
4 | Once again , Marxists claim , medicine performs its camouflage trick for capitalism , masking the extent to which ill-health originates from the exploitation of workers in the production process itself . |
5 | And he could finance his bid with the cash he raises from the sale of players like Lindsay Curry , Ricky Wade and Stephen Baxter . |
6 | Zoology ranges from the study of molecules to that of animal communities . |
7 | Meanwhile the urban working force suffers from the loss of bonuses as factory productivity is cut , and from official disapproval of the previously fast-growing sector of private commerce . |
8 | With the active cooperation of members of the Northumberland and Durham Branch , and Colin Jenks from the College of Arts and Technology in Newcastle , and Branch-sponsored tuition scheme has been established in Newcastle , meeting at the headquarters of the Logic Group plc . |
9 | The role of the state in creating effective demand emerges from the tendency of conditions of relatively open market competition to develop into increasingly monopolistic and oligopolistic market relationships . |
10 | The picture that emerges from the work of revisionists , however , casts grave doubt on this . |
11 | Despite the lack of studies , much of what follows in this book derives from the application of theories of play to the study of reading . |
12 | The knowledge which is concentrated in government agencies is not only that which derives from the employment of professionals , scientists and technologists . |
13 | First , one of the main characteristics of attachment behaviour , which we outlined in the previous chapter and which derives from the study of animals and humans , is the specificity of the required caring figure . |
14 | The name derives from the number of goldsmiths who traded in the street in earlier times . |
15 | It follows from the existence of values that individuals will be evaluated and therefore placed in some form of rank order . |
16 | It extends from the classification of subject-areas and the definition of concepts through the topics and methods of empirical research to the construction of models and theory generally . |
17 | This one dates from the introduction of warrants . |
18 | Then he adds an Indian saying , ‘ The ordinary man learns from his experiences , the wise man learns from the experience of others . ’ |
19 | The essential triumph comes from the assembly of details , and the most valuable of these is revealed where contradictoriness is introduced , at which point the picture of Johnson always grows clearer . |
20 | The points value of a champion , and of any magic item he carries , comes from the proportion of points allocated to the army 's characters and NOT the regiments . |
21 | The points value of a champion , and of any magic item he carries , comes from the proportion of points allocated to the army 's characters and NOT the regiments . |
22 | The eye has two different origins : the eyecup that forms the retina is an outgrowth from the brain , while the lens comes from the sheet of cells covering the embryo . |
23 | But , in fact , most methane comes from the action of bacteria on organic waste in swamps , rice paddy fields and refuse tips . |
24 | This water is not only derived from the food that we eat and the fluid that we drink : much of it comes from the multitude of secretions which enter the gut lumen . |
25 | This method arises from the formation of complexes of calcium and magnesium ions with EDTA ( ethylenediamine tetra-acetic acid ) . |
26 | A related difficulty with the concept of informal sector arises from the range of activities it covers . |
27 | The sheet also surrounds Jupiter and arises from the leakage of electrons and ions from the belt , though their large energies of motion are reduced to lower values more typical of the torus . |
28 | Another potentially troublesome difference in perspective between presidents and members of the legislature arises from the separation of powers . |
29 | In their metaphorical indiscipline they had gained ‘ new status ’ and slipped across a boundary into marginality , for as Foucault ( 1977 : 25 ) has suggested , the idea of discipline revolves around control of the physical body and ‘ proceeds from the distribution of individuals in space … it is always the body that is at issue — the body and its forces , their utility and their docility , their distribution and their punishment ’ . |
30 | If such eclecticism counts as a limitation , it hardly detracts from the achievement of Jesuits as patrons and teachers of science . |