Use "derive from" in a sentence

1. Children derive comfort from familiar surroundings.

2. Many English words derive from Latin.

3. Thousands of English words derive from Latin.

4. I didn't get/derive benefit from school.

5. All non-indented interfaces derive from IUnknown.

6. We can derive some comfort from this fact.

7. To derive a little pleasure from his children.

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

9. The two attitudes derive from different historical perspectives.

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

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

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

13. Individuals have to derive all their sustenance from a leader.

14. We can derive the word 'derelict' from the Latin 'derelictus'.

15. From that I unknowingly derive some sort of warm solace.

16. Many colleges derive most of their income from tuition fees.

17. 3 From where, though, did Huxley derive the term “agnostic”?

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

19. How can we derive great benefit from the Memorial season?

20. 3 Medically,(www.Sentencedict.com) we will derive great benefit from this technique.

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

22. Unsurprisingly, ‘sadistic Bestials’ derive sexual pleasure from the torturing of animal

23. Because they derive a high from sniffing toluene, a chemical solvent.

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

25. Aldehydes derive their name from the dehyd ration of al cohols

26. The contemporary cutting edge will derive strength only from the idealistic framework.

27. 3 Females and cubs clearly derive some benefit from living in groups.

28. ◦ advertising suggests that the smoker can derive advantages or benefits from smoking.

29. From those two virtues derive the tranquillity, comfort, and content of domesticity.

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

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

32. The Community industry could therefore derive some advantage from this positive market situation.

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

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

35. They have questioned the view that stratification systems derive ultimately from shared values.

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

37. The skeletons of Pakicetus show that whales did not derive directly from mesonychids.

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

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

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

41. Mr Ying is one of those happy people who derive pleasure from helping others.

42. Hemingway's short sentences derive their power from their revolt against earlier, more discursive styles.

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

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

45. * Maybe he will derive the most corrective benefit from their studying with him alone.

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

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

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

49. Understand how to derive the indirect SCF from the Income Statement and the Balance Sheet.

50. Block diagrams derive their name from the rectangular elements found in this type of diagram.

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

52. Partnerships are about intentions but they derive their stature and attraction from what they achieve.

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

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

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

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

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

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

59. To derive benefit from taekwondo training, the body has to be in peak physical condition.

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

61. Against this, many who take the plunge derive enormous satisfaction from building up a family enterprise.

62. 15 What computer processing methods are used to derive thematic maps from multispectral remotely-sensed images?

63. This does not, however, prevent these elected representatives from claiming to derive their legitimacy from a (fictitious) absolute majority.

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

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

66. 22 Thus D in Figure 6-2a indicates tIle benefits which private individuals derive from education.

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

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

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

70. The AHS fossil's tibia and fibula were unearthed from Member I, the same layer from which the other Omo remains derive.

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

72. Second, to remove the standard dessert from the menu would penalise all those people who derive pleasure from conspicuous self-denial.

73. Butterflies have an intimate relationship with flowering plants, which they pollinate, and themselves derive nourishment from the nectar.

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

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

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

77. Goats are highly susceptible to Haemonchus contortus particularly when they are precluded from browsing and derive all their food intake from pasture.

78. Second,[Sentencedict.com] to remove the standard dessert from the menu would penalise all those people who derive pleasure from conspicuous self-denial.

79. Popular sovereignty: It is stated that all powers of government "derive, under God, from the people" (Article 6.1).

80. The instructions cause the processor to derive activity counts from the activity data acquired by the activity monitor.