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From and beginning
From the beginning of his career, Patchen has adopted an anti-intellectual approach to poetry.
From the beginning of commercial recording, new discs purported to be indistinguishable from The Real Thing have regularly been put in circulation.
From the very beginning the electoral discussions raised fundamental issues in Moroccan politics, precisely the type of questions that were most difficult to resolve in the new government.
`` From its beginning '', the trustees' statement said Friday, `` Emory University has assumed as its primary commitment a dedication to excellence in Christian higher learning.
From this earth, then, while it was still virgin God took dust and fashioned the man, the beginning of humanity ''.
From an analysis of relationships and diversities within the Asterales and with their superorders, estimates of the age of the beginning of the Asterales have been made, which range from 116 Mya to 82Mya.
From the beginning, Colangelo wanted to market the Diamondbacks to a statewide fan base and not limit fan appeal to Phoenix and its suburbs.
From left to right: end of a video scan line, front porch, horizontal sync pulse, back porch with color burst, and beginning of next line
From being a mere village in an agricultural district at the beginning of the 19th century, the place grew rapidly in population owing to the abundance of coal and iron ore, and the population of the whole parish, 1, 486 in 1801, increased tenfold during the first half of the 19th century.
" From beginning to end, Capp was acid-tongued toward the targets of his wit, intolerant of hypocrisy, and always wickedly funny.
From the beginning of each playing period with a stroke-off ( a set strike from the centre-spot by one team ) until the end of the playing period, the ball is in play at all times, except when either the ball leaves the field of play, or play is stopped by the referee.
From the very beginning Mayotte refused to join the new republic and aligned itself even more firmly to the French Republic, but the other islands remained committed to independence.
From the beginning they have been the largest vote-winning party, averaging around 40 %.
From the beginning of civilization to the 20th century, ownership of heavy cavalry horses has been a mark of wealth amongst settled peoples.
From the very beginning, the Soviet's operation entailed elaborate denial and deception, known in the USSR as Maskirovka.
From the beginning of Communist rule in 1949, until the 1980s, when China was in the early years of economic reform, the focus was largely on peasant life, as interpreted via the officially sanctioned Marxist theory of class struggle.
From the very beginning of mapmaking, maps " have been made for some particular purpose or set of purposes ".
From 1839, larger American clipper ships started to be built beginning with the Akbar, 650 tons OM, in 1839, and including the 1844-built Houqua, 581 tons OM.
From the beginning, the CIA was in charge.
From the beginning of the movement, the free exchange of ideas among the people was fostered by the journals published by its leaders.
From the beginning of the 2008 – 09 season to New Year's Day, the Wings enjoyed success.
From the beginning the Emperor had refused to accept the will of Charles II, and he did not wait for England and the Dutch Republic to begin hostilities.
From the beginning to the end of his career at the New Yorker, he frequently provided what the magazine calls " Newsbreaks " ( short, witty comments on oddly worded printed items from many sources ) under various categories such as " Block That Metaphor.
From flamenco's beginning in the 18th century most performers were professional.
From 60, 000-80, 000 Russian soldiers remained stationed in Finland at the beginning of 1918, but the majority of them were demoralized and unwilling to fight, and were withdrawn from Finland by the end of March.

From and seventeenth
From the seventeenth to the nineteenth century it was a popular practice to flood the piazza in the summer, and the aristocrats would then ride around the inundated square in their carriages.
From birth to 1789, as a second son, he was known officially as Louis-Charles, Duke of Normandy and colloquially as the prince du sang ( prince of the blood ); then on becoming heir-apparent as a four year old after the death of his 7 year old older brother the Dauphin Louis Joseph from a quick acting illness on June 4, 1789 to October 1791 he became styled for the period officially as Louis-Charles, Dauphin of France ( the seventeenth Dauphin of France ; the hereditary title under the Capet Monarchy of a French crown prince ).
From the middle of the seventeenth century onwards, many new toll roads were created in various parts of Britain through acts of Parliament.
From the middle of the seventeenth century, almost all new Latin-rite altars were built against a wall or backed by a reredos, with a tabernacle placed on the altar or inserted into the reredos.
From the seventeenth century they often played the koto or the shamisen.
From the seventeenth century onwards European settlers brought other animals, including cats, cattle, horses, Small Asian Mongoose ( Herpestes javanicus ), sheep, goats, and the Brown Rat ( Rattus norvegicus ).
From the seventeenth century onwards the game, which at its peak rivaled chess for popularity in Europe, virtually disappeared until the late 19th and early 20th century when rediscovered by historians.
From the seventeenth century the shires started to be used for local administration apart from judicial functions.
From E. Sykes's " Persia and Its People ": " Early in the seventeenth century, Shah Abbas imported Chinese workmen into his country to teach his subjects the art of making porcelain, and the Chinese influence is very strong in the designs on this ware.
From the seventeenth century the shires started to be used for local administration apart from judicial functions.
From the latter part of the seventeenth century these could be found serving in Spain itself or in its possessions, and fought against Portugal, against rebellions in Catalonia, in the War of the Spanish Succession, War of the Polish Succession, War of the Austrian Succession ( in the fighting in Italy ), and against Britain in the American Revolutionary War.
From the seventeenth century until the early twentieth century, the region was the site of the Buton sultanate ( Butung ).
From the seventeenth to the nineteenth century, bollocks or ballocks was allegedly used as a slang term for a clergyman, although this meaning is not mentioned by the OED's 1989 edition.
From the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries, " vulgar " simply described the common language or vernacular of a country.
* From the seventeenth century on, a frock is a thigh-or full-length loose outer garment worn by shepherds, workmen, and farm workers in Britain, generally of heavy linen with a broad flat collar, now usually called a smock-frock.
From the late seventeenth to the mid nineteenth century smugglers used the Cove and other bays and beaches nearby.
From being in seventeenth and last place in the County Championship in 1948 ( and failing to win a county match between 1934 and 1939 ) Brown led Northants to sixth place in 1949.
From the end of seventeenth century up to 1837 CE, Poonch was ruled by the Muslim Rajas of Loran in Tehsil Haveli.
From the high Middle Ages, in works of piety, clerical critics often deemed romances to be harmful worldly distractions from more substantive or moral works, and by 1600 many secular readers would agree ; in the judgement of many learned readers in the shifting intellectual atmosphere of the seventeenth century, the romance was trite and childish literature, inspiring only broken-down ageing and provincial persons such as Don Quixote, knight of the culturally isolated province of La Mancha.
From 1169 until their eclipse in the early seventeenth century following the Tudor conquest of Ireland, the community underwent a process whereby they became Hiberniores Ipsis Hibernis.
* Stephen G. Burnett, From Christian Hebraism to Jewish studies: Johannes Buxtorf ( 1564-1629 ) and Hebrew learning in the seventeenth century ( Studies in the history of Christian thought 68 ).
From the latter the larger seventeenth century Katharinenkirche developed.
From the mid to late seventeenth century, French art is more often referred to by the term " Classicism " which implies an adherence to certain rules of proportion and sobriety uncharacteristic of the Baroque, as it was practiced in southern and eastern Europe during the same period.
From the seventeenth century to the early part of the twentieth century, artistic production in France was controlled by artistic academies which organized official exhibitions called salons.

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