Example sentences of "from the [noun sg] of [noun pl] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 This characteristic stems from the diversity of techniques required to climb the rock .
2 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 .
3 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 .
4 Apart from the addition of variables derived from the two new questions , the other tables do not exactly correspond .
5 The sound of voices raised in anger and hysterical sobbing could be plainly heard coming from the suite of rooms occupied by the Prince and Princess of Wales at Sandringham House .
6 Using pigment analysis , cross-section analysis , energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis ( EDX ) , laser microspectral analysis ( LMA ) and X-rays among other techniques , Dr Roy and his colleagues were able to show how these great paintings evolved , from the type of canvases used to the pigments and the painting techniques themselves .
7 Sections 2 ! 5 of the UCTA apply only to " business liability " , which is defined by s 1(3) as " liability for breach of obligations or duties arising ( a ) from things done or to be done by a person in the course of a business ( whether his own or another 's ) ; and ( b ) from the occupation of premises used for business purposes of the occupier " .
8 In addition , some clauses are regulated differently according to whether the contract is made with a person dealing as a consumer or with a non-consumer. ( a ) Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 The scope of the Act The UCTA 1977 applies to clauses which seek to restrict or exclude " business liability " , which is defined as liability for breach of obligations or duties arising — ( a ) from things done or to be done … in the course of a business … ; or ( b ) from the occupation of premises used for business purposes of the occupier …
9 From the stack of suitcases strapped on the overhead rack and the fact that they were driving away from the coast I guessed they were returning from a holiday .
10 The best evidence that the victim — the person towards whom the threats , abuses or insults were directed — did believe that he was about to be subjected to immediate violence would come from the mouth of the victim himself , but it is not necessary to produce a bystander as a witness in court to prove the point ; it can be a matter for inference from the narrative of events presented to the court .
11 And of course , the journalism is tip top , as you would expect from the choice of names chosen by Evans .
12 For their Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 the Government has fastidiously chosen from the menu of options offered by Philips only those dishes that it thought the most palatable .
13 The Type II disease occurs in yearlings , usually in late winter or spring following their first grazing season and results from the maturation of larvae ingested during the previous autumn and subsequently arrested in their development at the early fourth larval stage .
14 Instead , the amendment simply deleted the proviso excluding cinema films from the range of publications caught by the 1959 Act , which already extended to anything ‘ containing or embodying material to be read or looked at or both , any sound record , and any film or other record of a picture or pictures ’ .
15 Students select from the range of units offered within the BA Hons Philosophy course ( see page 122 ) .
16 Figure 4.3 ( b ) illustrates that the axial spin rate , and therefore the axial period of a planet can be determined from the spread of wavelengths induced in the echo by the motion of the surface .
17 It is clear , however , from the variety of lexicons used in the systems in Chapter 2 that there is still little agreement about how lexical items should be represented .
18 Baudrillard perceives this as the product of multi-national capitalism , but on reflection this principle is not so different from the utility of relations enhanced by the object which was stressed as socially cohesive in a non-industrial society .
19 The heat from the mass of bodies packed within keeps the temperature around 100°F .
20 When someone has been asked to make over on death whatever remains of an inheritance , and from the price of objects sold buys other objects , he is not regarded as having diminished [ the estate ] in respect of the objects sold … but the objects thus bought should be made over in place of the ownership which has changed … .
21 The Dorset , Devon and Cornwall holiday areas benefited from the good summer weather and from the upgrading of pubs carried out over the last few years .
22 Kyle ( 1978 , 1980a ) reviews some of the evidence from the study of animals deprived of sound at birth .
23 A solicitor will generally be free to decide for himself whether or not to accept instructions from a client , though he must always bear in mind the statutory obligation not to discriminate against potential clients on the grounds of race , colour , sex etc ( see Chapter 3 ) and he must refuse to act or to continue to act in any of the following circumstances : ( 1 ) where his client seeks to insist on the solicitor conducting his case in a way which would involve some breach of law or professional regulation ; ( 2 ) where the client 's affairs are outside his professional competence ; ( 3 ) if he suspects that the instructions purporting to come from his client do not in fact represent the client 's wishes ; ( 4 ) where the solicitor is unable to obtain confirmation from the client of instructions received from a third person ; ( 5 ) where there is or is likely to be some conflict of interest involving the solicitor himself , his client , other clients ( present , past or prospective ) , or the firm ; ( 6 ) where the solicitor may be a material and not merely formal witness in any proceedings ; ( 7 ) where another solicitor has already received instructions which have not been formally withdrawn .
24 These are calculated from the number of students registered for each module together with its size , single or double , rather than from class hours .
25 It 's a simple formula , but one that seems to be quite successful , judging from the number of copies sold already .
26 All I will permit myself to say is that there clearly exists a coherent body of thought within the present Conservative parliamentary Party ( supported , it would seem from the number of signatures added to the ‘ Fresh Start ’ petition circulated at the 1992 Conservative Party Conference , by a large number of members in the country ) , which is increasingly concerned by the direction of events in Europe and which makes the connection between this and Britain 's recent economic woes .
27 That Duck had opened a new avenue of literary expression is evident from the number of poems published in the 1730s , often addressed to Duck , in which poets assert the literary possibilities of their own labour .
28 The silver banner of the Merkuts was flapping on a staff outside the house and , from the number of animals tethered under the lean-to shelter at one side , he guessed that Orcadai was entertaining .
29 That is to say , his explanation of long waves lies in technological change which results from the bunching of innovations made by entrepreneurs .
30 The three trombones are therefore only equal to one , and the bass line is thus not so heavy as would appear from the list of instruments employed on it .
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