Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] [vb -s] from " in BNC.

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1 An ambivalence to assessment in Catholic schools rightly stems from the view that religious education in its entirety can not be submitted to formal and sharply focussed testing because of its very nature and its concern with personal faith and commitment .
2 Most of the evidence we find for full-time craftsmen nevertheless comes from the temples of the Middle and Late Minoan periods , so we should see the main period of craft industries as belonging to an urban society and in particular to the temples within that urban society .
3 The third difference between the colleges , the universities and the polytechnics probably arises from the existence of formal programmes in the colleges and the lack of them in universities and polytechnics .
4 The gallery 's catalogues of its French collections are currently undergoing thorough revision : that for the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries currently dates from 1957 and for the nineteenth from 1970 .
5 Difficulty expressing one 's emotions often stems from unresolved childhood conflicts .
6 But then , about one year in six , some fortunate swirl in the currents brings them back to the island where they first fell into the water a month earlier and at a high tide in December , a horde of tiny crablets no bigger than ants suddenly emerges from the waves and marches valiantly up the beach and on inland to restock the forest .
7 An argument by many atmospheric physicists , for example , is that shortcomings in the accuracy of weather prediction over periods of more than a few days largely results from the unsophisticated nature of existing models , the lack of suitable data and inadequate computer power ( see Fig. 9.3 , derived from Tyler 1989 ) .
8 At the national level , the degree of security provided for firms and individuals usually derives from the government 's maintenance of law , order and increasingly regulatory behaviour .
9 This increased expenditure upon the older age groups probably arises from the inter-relationship of several factors including : price inflation in health care ; population change ; the increased use of health services .
10 For example , a company manufacturing pressed steel cabinets for washing machines clearly benefits from conglomerate connections with suppliers of the basic materials and with those firms who assemble the branded final product .
11 In the absence of much research on ordinary families awareness of the role and importance of siblings inevitably comes from situations where families are brought to clinical or public scrutiny .
12 The pay range for Lecturers now runs from £12,638 to £31,726 .
13 The production of toxoplasma-specific antibodies by PBL from AIDS patients probably results from immune-system stimulation by antigens released from T gondii activated cysts .
14 One in seven primary-school children now suffers from asthma — but the Government 's response is simply that children who are at risk should be kept indoors when air quality is poor .
15 The population of monarchs clearly benefits from teaching each generation of birds not to eat them .
16 Current interest in leys really dates from 1961 , when ex-RAF pilot , Tony Wedd , published a small booklet entitled Skyways and Landmarks , which postulated a link between UFO sightings and mark points on the ground .
17 just as the formation of the neural tube and lens involves changes in the shape of a sheet of cells , so the formation of many other organs also arises from the folding and movement of cell sheets , which are caused by active change in the shape of the cells that make them up .
18 BGS 's network of seismographs now extends from Shetland to the Channel Islands .
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