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From and sprang
From this action sprang the idea of somehow uniting Greek and Shakespearean drama into a new total form, capable of restoring to life the ancient moral and poetic responses.
From his blood sprang a red flower, as at the death of Hyacinthus, which bore on its leaves the initial letters of his name Ai, also expressive of lament.
From this the legend of Pocahontas sprang forth, becoming part of American folklore, children's books, and movies.
From that moment a strong friendship sprang up between the abbot and the bishop, who was professor of theology at Notre Dame of Paris, and the founder of the Abbey of St. Victor.
From this sprang tiny copper wires which ended in a dainty cone plugged into her right ear.
From my navel there sprang a tree.
From the town assembly, a national assembly and the progress of commerce sprang Parliament all over Europe around the end of the 12th century but not entirely representative or homogeneous for the nobility and the clergy.
From his family Gideon ( biblical figure ) sprang ( Josh.
From 1840 more permanent settlements sprang up, first at Wellington, then at Nelson and at Wanganui ( Petre ).
From the same blood sprang the Erinyes, suggesting that the ash-tree nymphs represented the Fates in milder guise ( Graves 6. 4 ).
From the Meliae sprang the race of mankind of the Age of Bronze.
From the blood that spurted from her neck and falling into the sea, sprang Pegasus and Chrysaor, her sons by Poseidon.
From this incestuous union sprang the child Adonis.
From this union sprang Taligent, a small Cupertino, California, company that's now developing nothing less than a universal operating system.
From these conditions sprang considerable agitation among the small working and professional classes.
From her neck sprang Pegasus (" he who sprang ") and Chrysaor (" bow of gold "), the result of Poseidon and Medusa's meeting.
From the midpoint of this division a flaming torch sprang up, spewing out, over a considerable distance, fire, hot coals, and sparks.
From the race of Hildings sprang Harald Red-beard granrauði, mother's father of Halfdan the Black inn svarti.
" Furthermore, Gervase writes, " From the midpoint of the division a flaming torch sprang up, spewing out, over a considerable distance, fire, hot coals and sparks.
From these families sprang the teachers, professors, doctors, lawyers, engineers, businessmen, and politicians that contributed to the city's prosperity.
From his proposal sprang the Houston Street Viaduct ( originally named the Oak Cliff Viaduct ), begun October 24, 1910, and opened to traffic February 22, 1912, acclaimed as the longest concrete bridge in the world.
From these, sprang the Taulantii, Parthini, Dardani, Enchelaeae, Autariates, Dassaretae and the Daors.
From the Skadar Lake at the east its territory sprang down the river of Zeta all the way to the river of Piva to the west.

From and unprecedented
From 1920 Eisenhower served with an unprecedented succession of generals – Fox Conner, John J. Pershing, Douglas MacArthur and George Marshall.
From this point on, Wagner finished each act and sent it off for engraving before he started on the next-a remarkable feat given the unprecedented length and complexity of the score.
During his tenure, the Philharmonic enjoyed a period of unprecedented success and prosperity and performed its first world premiere written by a world-renowned composer in the United States – Antonín Dvořák's Ninth Symphony " From the New World ".
From 2007 – 2008, 50 % of COPE's Executive was under the age of 30, unprecedented for a major civic municipal party in Canada.
From September 2006, a new fleet of low-floor single-decker was introduced, making the fleet an unprecedented 85 % low-floor.
From 1865 through 1918 an unprecedented and diverse stream of immigrants arrived in the United States, 27. 5 million in total.
From designs by Raphael for his own palazzo in Rome on an island block it seems that all facades were to have a giant order of pilasters rising at least two stories to the full height of the piano nobile, " a grandiloquent feature unprecedented in private palace design ".
* From 2004 to 2006, both the men's and women's ice hockey teams won three consecutive NCAA Division III National Championships, an unprecedented feat for a college at any level.
From 1966 to 1979, the enactment of rate controls presented thrifts with a number of unprecedented challenges, chief of which was finding ways to continue to expand in an economy characterized by slow growth, high interest rates and inflation.
From the same recording session at the King Studios in Cincinnati, Ohio, King cut the instrumental " Hide Away ," which the next year reached # 5 on the R & B Charts and # 29 on the Pop Singles Charts, an unprecedented accomplishment for a blues instrumental.
From the OMA book Content a social condenser is described as ; " Programatic layering upon vacant terrain to encourage dynamic coexistence of activities and to generate through their interference, unprecedented events.
From this they stress that the industrial revolution and the ability to extract and use dense energy resources resulted in unprecedented exponential growth in human populations and consumption.
From a news point of view, most of Steyn ’ s editorship was marked by a succession of crises in South Africa, starting with the Soweto Uprising of 1976 and continuing through the turbulent 1980s when an increasingly isolated apartheid government faced popular opposition on an unprecedented scale.
From 1942 until 1949 Ahane captured another unprecedented seven county titles in-a-row, with Mackey featuring prominently in all these victories.
From the early times, ideologists of Communism have postulated that within the new society of pure communism and the social conditions therein, a New Man and New Woman would develop with qualities reflecting surrounding circumstances of post-scarcity and unprecedented scientific development.

From and linguistic
From the 1960s and 1970s onward, language, symbolism, text, and meaning came to be seen as the theoretical foundation for the humanities, through the influence of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ferdinand de Saussure, George Herbert Mead, Noam Chomsky, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Roland Barthes, Jacques Derrida and other thinkers in linguistic and analytic philosophy, structural linguistics, symbolic interactionism, hermeneutics, semiology, linguistically oriented psychoanalysis ( Jacques Lacan, Alfred Lorenzer ), and deconstruction.
From a linguistic point of view, Bokmål and Danish are the same language.
From the late 1980s a new school of linguistic relativity scholars have examined the effects of differences in linguistic categorization on cognition, finding broad support for weak versions of the hypothesis in experimental contexts.
From the nineteenth century onwards influence from the South through education and increased mobility have caused Scots features to retreat northwards so that for all practical purposes the political and linguistic boundaries may be considered to coincide.
From the perspective of linguistic typology, Thai can be considered to be an analytic language.
From approximately this point on, the Latin vernaculars began to be viewed as separate languages, developing local norms and, for some, orthographies of their own, so that Vulgar Latin must be regarded not as extinct – since all modern Romance varieties are its continuation – but as replaced conceptually and terminologically by multiple labels recognizing regional differences in linguistic features.
From a linguistic perspective, this term is an alternative name for the varieties of the Romanian language spoken in the Republic of Moldova ( see History of the Romanian language ).
From his childhood he displayed a flair for linguistic and antiquarian studies.
From a linguistic point of view, Louis Remacle has shown that a good number of the developments that we now consider typical of Walloon appeared between the 8th and 12th centuries.
From the linguistic point of view, all modern Qiang people speak one of the two Qiang languages, which are members of the Qiangic sub-family of Tibeto-Burman.
From an early stage of their history, they shared a number of linguistic and cultural characteristics that distinguished them from other Bantu-speakers of southern Africa.
From a linguistic point of view, however, neither interpretation is convincing, so that we can only safely say that the word Sinhala is somehow connected to a term meaning " lion ".
From a linguistic standpoint, the tico namesake is not the same as the actual suffix utilized in everyday Costa Rican language.
From cultural references, familiar English names, and references to regional linguistic dialects that appear in the core books, it seems likely that this Terra is nonetheless our own Earth.
From a linguistic perspective, the Hati Gumpha inscriptions are similar to modern Oriya and essentially different from the language of the Ashokan edicts.
From 1891 onward, linguistic affiliation in Wales has been assessed in the census, and the situations in 1901 and 1981 are shown in the map.
( 2008 ), " The problem of the Caucasian Sprachbund ", in Muysken, Pieter, From linguistic areas to areal linguistics, John Benjamins Publishing, ISBN 978-90-272-3100-0.
From the body of ethnographic and linguistic literature on Mindanao they are variously known as Tboli, T ' boli, Tböli, Tiboli, Tibole, Tagabili, Tagabeli, and Tagabulu.
From this philosophic source then derived Neo-Platonism, Christian mysticism, negative theology, and hermeticism, philosophies which use linguistic and logical strategies that indirectly speak about the ineffable — a concept inexpressible as thought, and only expressible as emotion.
From 2000-2005, for instance, The Dialect Survey queried North American English speakers ' usage of a variety of linguistic items, including vocabulary items that vary by region.
* From May 2011, http :// www. linguasphere. info provides free online access to the current research & reference materials of the Observatoire linguistique / Linguasphere Observatory, including the complete Linguascale coding of the world ’ s languages ( LS-2010, totalling over 32, 800 coded entries & over 70, 900 linguistic names ) and the contents of the original Linguasphere Register of the World ’ s Languages & Speech Communities ( LS-2000 ).
From a linguistic point of view, the work is an example of early philosophical writing in new Persian.
From a literary and linguistic viewpoint, these hymns represent important innovations ; they turn away from Greek prosody and instead seem to have been based on the rhythmic marching songs of Roman armies.

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