Use "derive from" in a sentence

1. Many English words derive from Latin.

2. Thousands of English words derive from Latin.

3. All non-indented interfaces derive from IUnknown.

4. All syllables derive from the primordial syllable - OM.

5. The two attitudes derive from different historical perspectives.

6. Regional impacts derive from acidification and ground level ozone.

7. These defensive behavior patterns derive from our subconscious fears.

8. These stories derive from his experiences during the Long March.

9. The name may derive from the Luwian adjective ala- ("high").

10. They may have views on issues which derive from previous experience.

11. His difficulties did not derive from the way he was reared.

12. Generation gap, conservation, reminiscence, pedantry and stubbornness all basically derive from that.

13. The common name is thought to derive from the Italian ( Ferrarese) word Avosetta.

14. These performance metrics derive from the experience and contribution of the Council members.

15. These cell types can derive from several cells well separated in the lineage.

16. Most finite verbal forms diachronically derive from nominalizations and periphrastic constructions with auxiliary verbs.

17. Both "Agitation" and the verb "Agitate" derive from Latin agere …

18. The initial capital for the establishment of financial institutions must derive from legal activities.

19. We are concerned with the quality of goods and the satisfactions we derive from them.

20. The primary pleasures of the imagination derive from direct observation of objects before our eyes.

21. The secondary pleasures of the imagination derive from recollection of objects no longer actually present.

22. The funding to do anything, however, must in the long run derive from national resources.

23. Which suggests that the life patterns imposed on infants in fact derive from biological need.

24. Thus D in Figure 6-2a indicates tIle benefits which private individuals derive from education.

25. Many of its common names derive from these sources, such as loturine, Aribine and passiflorin

26. Given names most often derive from the following categories: Aspirational personal traits (external and internal).

27. (b) What personal benefits may we derive from adjusting to a new set of circumstances?

28. The Community, alongside its obligations which derive from the Treaties, must also respond to citizens' concerns.

29. The ALC-lymphomas described above derive from T cells and are generally accepted as biological entities.

30. clearly much the same social benefits from unrecorded alcohol as those that derive from commercial alcohol.

31. 22 Thus D in Figure 6-2a indicates tIle benefits which private individuals derive from education.

32. Ballotin Chocolate Whiskey’s flavors derive from the most logical source, the essence of the base spirit itself

33. Teachers' perceptions about reading instruction often derive from a pragmatic approach rather than from a theoretical background.

34. Similar estimates derive from observed forest destruction, scaled from the uprooting of trees in nuclear weapons tests.

35. For this reason the real differences of sizes that derive from the different permittivities, are partially ineffective.

36. Such power may derive from an individual's physical strength, their economic resources, position, expertise, personal charisma etc.

37. In Buddhist Japanese, Sanskrit terms used in some chants also derive from ateji but were not called such.

38. The terms cynic and Cynical derive from the Greek kynikos, which is the adjective of kyon, or ‘dog’

39. Sovereignty was no longer considered to derive from the absolute power of a monarch, but from the people.

40. One of the first commercial products to derive from this biotechnology is likely to be genetically engineered tomatoes.

41. (b) What should be our attitude toward study, and what benefits can we derive from this important activity?

42. Data which go toward answering the first two of these questions derive from a number of sources. Sentencedict.com

43. The dunes derive from sand accumulations bordering the lee side of sand sources such as playas and alluvial plains.

44. The term "Algonquin" has been suggested to derive from the Maliseet word elakómkwik (pronounced ), "they are our relatives/allies".

45. These are mean values in the sense that they derive from mean data."Glossary of Coastal Terminology: H–M".

46. From a Marxist perspective, systems of stratification derive from the relationships of social groups to the means of production.

47. Many of these taboos derive from patriarchal societies taking the power of women and turning it on its head.

48. The executives' gargantuan incomes derive from their power over what has become an increasingly scarce factor of production, capital.

49. Discuss immediate personal benefits we derive from pioneering, and show how this extra effort contributes to the congregation’s progress.

50. The name of the breed may derive from that of the suppressed comune of Breonio, now part of Fumane.

51. 20 One of the first commercial products to derive from this biotechnology is likely to be genetically engineered tomatoes.

52. The term Celadon is thought to derive from the name of the hero in a seventeenth-century French pastoral comedy

53. This Board rejected both these submissions and held that the profits did not arise in or derive from Hong Kong.

54. Aureate is among several adjectives in English pertaining to gold that derive from the Latin name for the metal, aurum.

55. Thus, the only evictions allowed derive from a failure to abide by the contract in question and are a legal matter.

56. Recorded in many spellings including Bauld, Bawld, Bold, Boud, Boulde, Bowld and Bould, may derive from a number of possible sources

57. These criticisms of stratification theory derive from the known importance of gender as a criterion of social differentiation in modern society.

58. The peptides derive from the Amyloid precursor protein (APP), which is cleaved by beta secretase and gamma secretase to yield Aβ.

59. Thus, the only evictions allowed derive from a failure to abide by the contract in question and are a legal matter

60. Other parts of my argument derive from Malinowski, Mauss and Levi-Strauss, as well as from various of my younger contemporaries.

61. Cataphract armour was famous for being extensive, even having their name derive from "Completely covered", but that doesn't mean impenetrable

62. The name Luzon is thought to derive from the Tagalog word lusong, which is a large wooden mortar used in dehusking rice.

63. Beck suggests that we have an automatic style of thinking which to a large extent determines the conclusions we derive from experience.

64. Crabby, crabbed- Crabby and crabbed derive from a crab's sideways movement and habit of snapping (thought to suggest a perverse or irritable nature)

65. One consents to the establishment of a political society and to its authority because of the benefits one will derive from its existence.

66. Crabby, Crabbed - Crabby and Crabbed derive from a crab's sideways movement and habit of snapping (thought to suggest a perverse or irritable nature)

67. Human fat is a liquid at body temperature, so Adipocytes are normally filled with oil. Adipocytes develop from adipoblasts, which derive from fibroblasts

68. Bulgarian and Macedonian derive from the East South Slavic group and Slovene, Serbian and Croatian are derived from the West South Slavic group.

69. Acinic cell tumors derive from serous cells of salivary gland acini, in rare cases from fetal inclusions of salivary tissue in intraparotid lymph nodes.

70. The origin of the l-Abrine in the unexposed population is unknown, but may derive from diet because l-Abrine is a tryptophan derivative

71. Both words ultimately derive from Latin positum - to put, but imported separately from French - which added the a-prefix ("towards") to give Appose

72. 23 Multiplayer online games accessed through a game console have hard-and-fast performance rules that derive from the fixed refresh rate of the display device.

73. Monoculture forests reduce the range of habitats for birds and other wildlife and thereby reduce the environmental and economic benefits people derive from wildlife seed-dispersal.

74. Cruel describes someone or something that causes pain and suffering, with no empathy. Crueler and Cruelest are the American English spellings, they derive from the Latin word …

75. Sister Chromatids are by and large identical (since they carry the same alleles, also called variants or versions, of genes) because they derive from one original chromosome

76. It in turn is said to derive from a word first seen 50 years before that, not kerfuffle but simply fuffle; also meaning "to throw into disorder."

77. Catty-corner, kitty-corner, and cater-cornered all derive from the Middle English catre-corner, literally meaning four-cornered.All three forms are used throughout the English-speaking world

78. “Bombay” is an anglicization of the Portuguese name “Bombaim,” which is believed to derive from the phrase “Bom Bahia,” or “Good Bay.” (Portugal held territories in western India

79. Barbadian culture is syncretic, and the island's musical culture is perceived as a mixture of African and British musics, with certain unique elements that derive from Indigenous sources.

80. Does it derive from Hell? Or something more primal? See Category:Caprine Authority for pages which require this quality (or specific levels of it), or click here to show them