Example sentences of "[noun] from [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | What surprises also is the sheer climb to the green — 70ft in elevation from the hollow in the fairway . |
2 | A barograph used to record the pressure of gas in the gasholder in Batavia enabled the times of arrival of the pressure waves from the explosions to be recorded accurately , but the blast produced by the greatest of the explosions was such that the gasholder leapt out of its well , causing the gas to escape . |
3 | It can be imagined that the soul of such a man will be laved always by waves from the ocean of his love ; he is at once carried away from all bitterness ; and enmity has no meaning for him . |
4 | Leicestershire is the only county to account for its distributions from the TCCB on a cash as opposed to an accruals basis . |
5 | Dr Hi-Do-Ho Calloway , The King of Hi-De-Ho , celebrated his honorary doctorate in fine arts from the University of Rochester with a show-stopping rendition of his signature song ‘ Minnie the Moocher . ’ |
6 | Its proposals will have significant impact on the arts from the abolition of customs posts at frontiers to the approximation of VAT on works of arts and antiques . |
7 | The museum contains European paintings of the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries , sculpture and decorative arts from the collection of the Herzog Anton Ulrich , and drawings and prints from the fifteenth to twentieth centuries , The print room and library will stay open to the public . |
8 | There is a sense of isolation from the rest of the world , a sense of the power in the dogs , and a wonderful feeling of being in control , but only just . |
9 | And Defence policy can not grow in isolation from the rest of national decision-making in Whitehall . |
10 | After many straight miles , the road curves inland to round Applecross Bay , a welcome sight well endowed with trees and , after passing a picnic place , turns into the village of Applecross , a friendly place with no obvious awareness of its extreme isolation from the rest of the world . |
11 | This does beg the question , however , of the extent to which education , and higher education in particular , exists in isolation from the rest of society . |
12 | ‘ My Lords , if one reads the words ‘ the rights ’ at the opening of section 3(1) literally and in isolation from the rest of the section , Mr. Denison 's submission undoubtedly has force . |
13 | The two further major reservations that must be made are first that the service is moulded chiefly by the doctrine of ministerial responsibility with all that flows from it — anonymity , one collective viewpoint , secrecy and a degree of isolation from the rest of the community . |
14 | Some mammalian families must have migrated to that continent and evolved there in isolation from the rest of the world . |
15 | It is obvious that it would be insufficient and even counter-productive to tackle official curriculum areas in isolation from the rest of school life , from the rest of school-based gender construction . |
16 | Absolutely because in York , in sorry , in Litchfield you have a confirmed greenbelt right up to the boundary , they were pursuing a local plan for the Li the city of Litchfield in isolation from the rest of the district , and there they were promoting seven hundred and fifty houses to be taken out of the greenbelt . |
17 | Even the most ardent advocates of exchange rate flexibility no longer maintain that it is feasible for a country to pursue independent policy objectives in isolation from the rest of the world . |
18 | The seeds of herbs may be dispersed by large mammals , which eat and pass plant material in bulk : many such seeds have up until recently been considered to exhibit merely ‘ gravity ’ dispersal , when looked at in isolation from the rest of the plant . |
19 | When South America and Australia broke away to begin their long periods of isolation from the rest of the world , they each carried their own cargo of dinosaurs , and also of the less-prominent animals that were to become the ancestors of modern mammals . |
20 | My Lords is there not a danger at looking at er accident and emergency departments in isolation from the rest of the hospital . |
21 | Now the one thing that I think is important is that one can not look at the problems of any given society in the world in isolation from the rest of the world as a whole , and in particular , in the case of underdeveloped countries , their problems are very much linked to the situations that take place in the developed countries . |
22 | The biggest shortcoming of the Dobry Report , however , was that it never really came to grips with the major weakness of the development control system : its general isolation from the remainder of the planning process . |
23 | It may be artificial and unhelpful to consider the question as to the existence of a duty of care in isolation from the elements of breach of duty and damage . |
24 | It is , however , difficult , for a number of reasons , to accept the ‘ introductory ’ status of criminal law and its isolation from the mainstream of law teaching . |
25 | Efforts to merge the country with Libya [ see pp. 37367 ; 37703 ] were treated with great scepticism by analysts of the region , who interpreted it as an attempt by the regime to end its isolation from the mainstream of the Arab world . |
26 | It is impossible to analyze food production in the Third World in isolation from the relationship between the sexual division of labour and the sources of economic power . |
27 | It is curious that despite frequent allusion to man-environment relations by geographers , they largely chose to ignore the signposts that were evident from the mid nineteenth century onwards and physical geography proceeded largely in isolation from the hand of man . |
28 | He explained , ‘ Successful disposal of high-level waste requires total isolation from the biosphere for hundreds of thousands of years , time-spans exceeding by a huge factor anything within our technological experience . |
29 | They believed that emotions should be let out and then mastered ; there was their Protestantism , fighting the good fight , the insistence on going their own way , ; their fear and dislike of cities ; their psychological as well as actual isolation from the body of mankind ; their awareness of the stigma of art ; a distrust of the intellect when fed on abstractions ; a desire to get ‘ beyond ’ art to a kind of heaven and a paradoxical belief in art activity as a means of shedding psychic sickness . |
30 | There was a sheet of ice out in the courtyard from a burst pipe which had carried all the garbage from the kitchen with it . |