WordNet
See stem from
Usage examples of "stems from".
It is useless to gaze at people face to face, because the front of the egglike cocoon of man has a protective shield, which seers call the front plate, it is an almost impregnable, un- yielding shield that protects us throughout our lives against the onslaught of a peculiar force that stems from the emanations themselves.
The most widely used dating system in the Archipelago, which stems from the Havnorian Tale, makes the year Morred took the throne the first year of history.
No, my major concern stems from the high probability that our planetary shield will be forced back into atmosphere.
Jacobae, but sending up several stems from its shortly creeping root.
Roccella tinctoria is a small, dry, perennial lichen, in appearance a bunch of wavy, tapering branched, drab-coloured stems from 2 to 6 inches high, springing from a narrow base.
He pulled some leaves off the nearest tree and root stems from the ground and put them in his converter.
The adults lay sheltered by tall stems from the beating sun, resting with their long necks curled round upon their backs.
Europe stems from around half a million years ago, but there are claims of an earlier presence.
Abbado scuffed his boot across the vegetation, tearing stems from the roots.
They were experimenting with different types of branches to make the stems from because Granny Murray claimed they were destroying her elderberry trees.
It appears that sidedness stems from the fundamental wiring of the species, and that it developed most significantly when mankind lifted the forefeet from the ground.