Example sentences of "[noun] from [adv] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The existing knowledge about the employee from inside the organization makes it easier to decide whether he or she is able to perform the work well .
2 Candidates from both the UK and overseas are accepted on to the full-time programme .
3 Candidates from both the UK and overseas are accepted on to this full-time programme .
4 The butt end of the cigar was three paces from where the tyre treads were clearest , probably where the car had braked .
5 In the dead of night Elaine , 28 , drove the sparkling H-reg car from outside the home of her husband 's lover , through a pedestrian precinct and into the town hall 's glass-fronted main entrance .
6 In contrast , hospital based series have usually shown an increased mortality , which probably reflects the severity of disease in patients referred to specialist units from outside the area .
7 Kevan Smith also wasted a clear opening , misses Darlington counted to their cost when the lively Preece broke clear in the 75th minute and curled a shot past the advancing Prudhoe from outside the box .
8 The equipment takes images from inside the body in the form of thin slices which can then be viewed by specialists on a computer screen .
9 Although insignificant on the map , it has long been a magnet drawing folk from the Dales on repeated visits ; latterly there has been a growing influx of tourists and walkers from outside the county to see the magnificent waterfall of Hardraw Force .
10 Money spins the wheel from where the Bonanzas sit , and nobody lifts a finger to do anything without figuring the percentage angle .
11 Erm but erm sitting in a traffic jam this morning I was very concerned to learn that taking effect from tomorrow the government is changing the grant for adaptation for severely handicapped people .
12 After processing , the light from just the reference beam , directed at the plate , will ‘ replay ’ the hologram as if the object were still in place .
13 For what seemed like an eternity both of them were suspended in mid-air , filthy fumes pouring into the carriage from inside the tunnel .
14 There 's an igneous intrusion there , with fragments of garnet peridotite — that 's a rock from below the earth 's crust — and I 'd like to spend a bit of time there , though the rocks at the north-west end look pretty difficult to get at .
15 His job was to keep the stream of voices from inside the apartment above him recorded , encoded , radioed to Grosvenor Square for decoding and digestion by the listeners in the basement .
16 Gradually there arose a faint humming from outside the tent as people gathered to talk and speculate , so it seemed as if those left inside were surrounded by a swarm of curious but not unfriendly bees .
17 The result is weight and inch loss from just the areas we want to slim down .
18 The polytechnics of the new binary policy were to be a key group of partners for the CNAA from roughly the beginning of the 1970s : the Assistant Director of Hatfield Polytechnic spoke of the polytechnics and the CNAA as ‘ inseparable …
19 The EC proposes to tax imports from outside the EC by applying the reduced rate of tax to the full price , or , in the case of those countries like the UK and Denmark which do not have a reduced rate , the standard rate to 30% of the price .
20 It argues that , even at a reduced rate , VAT on imports from outside the EC would seriously damage the London art market .
21 This switch in the source of supply arises because although imports from the union partner are more costly than imports from outside the CU , these imports are not subject to the CET whereas imports from the rest of the world are subject to the CET .
22 Johnson ( 1985 , pp. 424–5 ) also cites prime ministerial intervention in promoting top civil servants , and the increasing frequency of appointments to senior posts from outside the service ( such as Peter Levene recruited from the private sector to head the Defence Procurement Executive in 1985 ) as evidence of ‘ a more active personnel policy ’ designed to enhance managerial competence .
23 Most of these birds seem to be visitors from outside the county .
24 There was an extra loud crash from inside the bus , followed by a stream of invective calling into question the parentage of the Pope and his fondness for animals .
25 ‘ I looked out from the window from where the man had fallen and what I saw was unbelievable , ’ he said .
26 She ends up sitting on him , facing the small window from where the children can now be heard playing , so that ail he can see is her lean and sculpted back , the ridge of her spine showing like knuckles on a fist .
27 In an interview published on Jan. 4 Sezgin mentioned Iran along with Syria , Iraq , and three unnamed countries from outside the region , as being responsible for encouraging separatist activity among Turkish Kurds .
28 His growing band of admirers , who gathered outside , were accustomed to hearing a great tumult from inside the walls , like riotous crowds fighting .
29 ‘ A shot from Charlton , especially if hit on the run from outside the penalty area , is one of the great events of the sport , not because it is rare , which it is not , but because the power of it is massive and it erupts out of elegance , ’ Arthur Hopcraft , who followed Charlton 's career from shy schoolboy to elder statesman , wrote in his classic account of the English game , The Football Man .
30 Chairman John Haynes said the group 's performance had been achieved with little help from either the UK or the US economies ( although the latter was showing a significant increase in retail spending in the fourth quarter ) : turnover was up by less than 2% to £11.1m .
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