Example sentences of "point of [noun] of [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 From the point of view of the resources crisis , this looks like a reasonably rational response : because there are so many more ‘ run of the mill ’ than ‘ serious ’ offenders , a bifurcated policy should save many more resources than it costs .
2 This has the advantage from the point of view of the courts of largely relieving them of the necessity to enter into the merits of business judgment , a matter to which we will return below .
3 It sticks in my throat that you know we 've had to pay it but , from the point of view of the residents , we 've done the right thing by letting it .
4 Er if your safety in your mines , from the point of view of the miners health , is dependent upon keeping below a certain limit of dust exposure .
5 A Scottish bus passengers ' consultative committee would be one mechanism by which any problems caused by the changes could be examined from the point of view of the users of the transport system in Scotland .
6 One is to be systematic from the point of view of the skills it is aimed to develop through this kind of work , which involves a close definition of the skills necessary to complete a project satisfactorily , and then to structure the work to include the practice and development of these skills .
7 The third need is to remember that while the 1988 Act changed many aspects of management from the point of view of the insider , it changed few things from the point of view of the parents , the employer or the public .
8 It would appear , furthermore , that the policy of maximising firm value is ideal not only from the point of view of the shareholders , but also from that of society as a whole , since , by giving proper weight to projects with a future pay- off , it strikes an optimal balance between production for present consumption and growth .
9 From the point of view of the emancipators , " where a settlement consisted of various estates and more than one commune , there , evidently , two units had to exist … : one economic ( the land commune ) , the other administrative " .
10 From the point of view of the authorities , revitalizing the universities was a policy fraught with danger .
11 For instance , in 1940 a British author of fairly conventional detective stories , Henry Wade ( who was in private life Sir Aubrey Fletcher , a magistrate and son of a full-time Metropolitan magistrate , and thus not unacquainted with police work ) wrote a book called The Lonely Magdalen , telling the story of a murder investigation seen largely from the point of view of the police officers conducting it .
12 It is perhaps particularly ironic that as yet we have no studies which have attempted to evaluate interventions from the point of view of the children themselves .
13 But er wh why from the point of view of the peasants was this radicalization taking place ?
14 In this chapter we are concerned to explore the interpretation and genesis of disorder and violence in the schoolroom from the point of view of the pupils .
15 Barbara Edmonds and Derek Ball pose the question ‘ what is relevance ? ’ from the point of view of the pupils themselves .
16 ‘ The tests that the Government want to adopt , I think , fail from the points of view of the teachers , the children and the parents , ’ he says .
17 If the radius of curvature of the bent beam is R then Euler-Bernoulli theory gives EI/R = M , where I is the moment of area of the cross-section and M the bending moment in the central section of the beam far from the points of application of the loads .
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