Example sentences of "have developed from " in BNC.
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1 | Lawless prefers to concentrate on further shaping Mason 's career , encouraged by his quick-witted responses to tuition and the enthusiasm that has developed from greater recognition . |
2 | In the last decade , Denis Healey has developed from prop-forward bruiser to everybody 's favourite uncle . |
3 | This festival has developed from this . |
4 | Dean and Chapter Library ( Durham ) The library has developed from the one founded by the Benedictine house of the tenth century . |
5 | The management or sociological approach to educational evaluation has developed from the discipline of industrial sociology . |
6 | Since the Second World War , executive search in the US has developed from a small cottage industry into a $ multimillion , multinational business which has deeply penetrated American corporate life . |
7 | He points to the way in which the law has developed from a maze of individual sets of circumstances in which one or other of the prerogative writs would lie to a general principle under which courts will review decisions on the three grounds of illegality , irrationality and procedural impropriety : see per Lord Diplock in Council of Civil Service Unions v. Minister for the Civil Service [ 1985 ] A.C. 374 , 410 . |
8 | Language awareness training for subject specialists has developed from work done by Industrial Language Training ( ILT ) in the 1970s . |
9 | As we can see , a wide variety of karate styles has developed from the art 's origins . |
10 | The taekwondo suit is called a tobok ; like the other martial arts uniforms , it is loose fitting and has developed from the peasant 's costume . |
11 | Even its poetry has developed from scholarly imitations . |
12 | Through subsidies the state has established a vast ‘ social salary ’ to make life easier for workers and it takes a pride in the extensiveness of the welfare system that has developed from this . |
13 | Much of the thinking about teaching historical concepts has developed from the work of J.S. Bruner in the early 1960s . |
14 | Paykel separates these from the person 's specific vulnerability to events , or to particular events , which has developed from personality attributes or developmental experiences . |
15 | It is also the result of long-standing commercial relationships and the mutual respect which has developed from these . |
16 | Keynesian economics , they say , is the comparative static equilibrium approach to macroeconomics which has developed from other people 's interpretations of the General Theory . |
17 | Names after the Arabic for finger , ‘ banan ’ , this slightly curved tropical fruit has developed from a luxury treat into today 's trendy , healthy convenience food . |
18 | The TQM strategy has developed from an earlier corporate planning exercise carried out in 1986 and more recently from a comprehensive survey conducted by an external quality consultant with support from the SDA . |
19 | The early evolutionary stages of development of wings are still in question they may have developed from outgrowths of exoskeleton from the body that assisted gliding initially , and then acquired a propulsive function . |
20 | Reputedly the smallest of England 's parish churches , it may have developed from an anchorite 's cell in the eleventh or twelfth century , and since that time had drawn many pilgrims to its almost inaccessible woodland site . |
21 | Those three operations then are the measure of modern medical practice : cancers which might have developed from an enlarged prostate , some rogue polyps and a spinal tumour , any one of which could have proved fatal , were all pre-empted by discovery and cure ; and I can not be other than deeply grateful for this additional lease of life . |
22 | This idea may even have developed from the hunting practices and rituals , in which men dressed as animals to be able to approach near enough to use their short-weapons effectively . |
23 | The emergence of speech might then have developed from neural systems for motor control already lateralised to the left half of the brain . |
24 | Even mankind might have developed from a different species . |
25 | The system may have developed from seed parasitism , but it itself is now parasitized by other wasps ovipositing through the syconium wall . |
26 | There seems to be no sense in which the idea of the Commonwealth can be said to have developed from Indirect Rule , but the similarity of the language employed , and the fact that enthusiasts for one were usually enthusiasts for the other , would appear to suggest that the two ideas sprang from the same rich soil , composted over the years of imperial fact and imperial fancy . |
27 | Much of this moral panic about population ageing seems to have developed from the widespread and possibly indiscriminate use of population dependency ratios ( Calasanti and Bonanno 1986 ) . |
28 | Petitions from communities , or common petitions , were few in Edward 's reign , and though they may have derived something from the example of clerical grievances , they could hardly have failed to have developed from private petitions . |
29 | The particle ia , which functions as a relativizer , bracketing off relative from main clause , as in 55 , is shown to have developed from an earlier deictic function , as in 56 : |
30 | These are thought to have developed from small differences in the density of the early universe from one region to another . |