Derived
in sentence
316 examples of Derived in a sentence
All parliamentarians, public officials, and regulators should understand and work to protect the Council of Europe’s principles,
derived
from the European Convention on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights’ case law.
Vlad received the nickname "Draculea" -
derived
from "Dragon" - from his father.
Written another way, "Dragolea," the name means "of love" or "the lovely one" - hardly fitting for a man who developed the unlovely habit of lancing his foes on a stake, from which the nickname "Tepes" (the Impaler) was
derived.
It makes digital space sound like airspace or territorial seas, something that is somehow
derived
from or adjacent to physical territory.
"Asia", on the other hand, is supposedly
derived
from the Akkadian 'asu,' meaning daybreak.
Member states also need intelligence
derived
from ongoing casework, not to inform policy, at least not directly, but to disrupt and dismantle networks and prevent attacks.
Europol is performing a similar function with material
derived
from police work, and we are working to ensure synergy between these two efforts.
America’s role as a global leader will surely suffer, as will the “soft power” that it previously
derived
from being a model of liberal democracy for others to emulate.
On the contrary, companies and workers depend on public services and the subsidies that the government provides with revenues
derived
from oil and gas.
As a result, all politics that were derived, no matter how loosely, from Marxism, lost credibility, and finally died in 1989.
For example, the Book of Life for humans contains around 200 genes
derived
from other organisms, contradicting the long-held view that all of our genes are transmitted vertically, from grandparents to parents to children.
Living beings continually manufacture their own constituents from small inorganic and organic building blocks, with the help of catalysts called enzymes and of energy
derived
from sunlight, mineral sources, or foodstuffs made by other organisms.
This is especially true when value is
derived
from the work of human hands, or the work of things that human hands have made, rather than from scarce natural resources, as in the Middle Ages.
To ordinary Nigerians, the fuel subsidy was the only advantage that they
derived
from the petrodollars that pour into the national treasury.
The strategic conclusion
derived
from such an analysis was clear, ambitious, and easily summarized: democratization.
In his conquest of power, Mao Zedong used military tactics
derived
from Sun Tzu, who lived around 500 BC;Confucianism, dating from around the same time, remains at the heart of China’s social thinking, despite Mao’s ruthless attempts to suppress it.
More insights into Japan’s real progress can be
derived
from another source: the new System of National Accounts 2008, the latest international statistical standard for national accounting by the United Nations Statistical Commission.
Moreover, accountability metrics should be
derived
from systems that members are already using at home.
Rudolf Diesel’s first engine, designed in the late 1800s, ran on fuel
derived
from peanut oil.
Embryonic stem cells are
derived
from an early embryo called blastocysts at about the 5 th day.
In many developing countries, total tax revenue is
derived
from three main sources: domestic taxes on goods and services (sales and excise taxes), direct taxes (primarily on corporations), and, most important, taxes on foreign trade (import duties).
While economists differ on many matters, one thing they can agree on is that taxing the revenues or capital gains
derived
from Costa Rica’s land won’t cause the land to move away.
Magna Carta’s key principles can be seen as
derived
from reason because the very idea of a law excludes arbitrary arrest and seizure, as well as the rendering of a verdict on any grounds other than the proper application of the law.
Indeed, no moral benefit can be
derived
from evoking the past if we fail to realize our group's shortcomings or errors.
But the prize impedes the flow of knowledge, reduces the benefits
derived
from it, and distorts the economy.
Likewise, more than a quarter of all medicinal drugs, representing billions of dollars in sales and reduced healthcare costs, possess active ingredients
derived
from wild species.
Rich countries have embraced biofuels – energy
derived
from plants – to reduce their reliance on fossil fuels.
That confidence may be
derived
partly from the business-friendly tax legislation that was recently enacted in the US.
Given the clear benefits that Europe has
derived
from the single market, they would have every incentive to do so.
Some find the impulses behind the Universal Declaration too secular, too materialistic, claiming it pays little regard to the higher authority that is the source of all moral imperatives and the rights
derived
from those imperatives.
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