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How to use derive from in a sentence

Looking for sentences with "derive from"? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
The pleasure we derive from being with others, along with our wanderlust and desire to explore, sets the stage nicely for smallpox.
It is to do with the loss of our national identity and nothing whatsoever to do with money or benefits we may or may not derive from such a move.
Adams' sarcasm did not solely derive from his jealousy of Franklin's easy popularity, though that always rankled with him.
The two buildings' formal similarities derive from their similar functions and desert landscapes.
These all seem to derive from the Folio text, but some may supplement it by accurately recording where breaks came between verses and refrains.
The word for poetry in Inupiaq is the same as the word to breathe, and both derive from anerca, the soul.
If obligations really were internal to promising then the obligation to keep a promise would have to derive from the institution of promising.
More recently, their prints derive from etchings, engravings and stencils, as well.
These data derive from computerised child health registers in each health authority and not from target payments.
A court's competence to grant an anti-suit injunction seems to derive from its jurisdiction to adjudicate.
It is difficult to believe that such clumsy moments derive from even a very early work by the great composer.
The second policy presumes that crimes derive from social disintegration and poverty.
Authentic architectural experiences derive from real or ideated bodily confrontations rather than visually observed entities.
Present day incorporations of towns and cities derive from this medieval use.
Funding for the operations, modernization, and support would derive from three sources.
They argue that existing differences in the lives of women and men derive from cultural definitions of gender roles.
Nearly all regional organizations and alliances derive from treaty-based sources.
Compliments derive from taking notice of praiseworthy situations and efforts.
Many of the criteria derive from the principles adopted in awarding special damages for personal injuries.
Many superheroes of bygone eras possess powers that exist in some way in the natural world or derive from real inventions.
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Examples from Classical Literature
Whatever the extent of the right of angary may be, it does not derive from the law of neutrality.
Samara, Saratov, and Tsaritsyn and a whole series of lesser towns derive from him.
Thus, who are they that derive from fiction and literature a prejudicial effect?
What interest could I possibly derive from the perpetration of such a crime?
But we remain blissfully unaware or unappreciative of the many benefits we derive from these unique peatland habitats.
What conclusions do you derive from the study of the cases of feral men?
In the nomenclature which we derive from fabulists, des Lupeaulx belonged to the species Bertrand, and was always in search of Ratons.
Let us examine the points in which it varies from pure democracy, and we shall comprehend both the nature of the cure and the efficacy which it must derive from the Union.
How much might churchgoing derive from the loneliness and anomie of car-obsessed suburbia, factors that make any form of avowable regular socializing attractive?
In addition, a missing clue on this issue is that cholera might derive from cholas, an Attic word meaning intestine, which has not survived in modern Greek.
It is certainly astonishing what rich comfort great minds, in the midst of momentous catastrophes, will derive from the consolations of philosophy.
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