Example sentences of "give [noun] to [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I might even give money to The Campaign for Heavier Helmets today .
2 Why does not he give freedom to the people of Scotland to move about without dipping into their pockets ?
3 I hope that Opposition Members will give credence to the views of industry and commerce in Northern Ireland , if they hope to attract future investment and employment to the Province .
4 These sequences may give rise to a kind of play , in which they are exaggerated , inverted or otherwise re-ordered in such a manner that a regular pattern or rhythm emerges in the finished product .
5 Although staff may have been appointed to a post With fixed hours and work schedules , a change in circumstances may give rise to a request for change .
6 For all of these types of capital allowance , where , on sale , the disposal proceeds exceed the cost of the asset less the allowances claimed , the disposal will give rise to a clawback of allowances equal to the smaller of the excess and the allowances claimed .
7 ( 10 ) Acceptance of the cash underwritten alternative and the consequent disposal of the consideration shares might give rise to a liability to capital gains tax depending on the individual circumstances of the accepting shareholder .
8 Each of the duties referred to , once established , is capable of being enforced by injunction and the breach of it will give rise to a liability in damages .
9 The duty of the council has been established and is capable of being enforced by injunction and any breach of it will give rise to a liability in damages .
10 Or it may give rise to a level of customer price-sensitivity which was hitherto absent in the target market segment .
11 An invisible barrier put up between different departments in a financial organisation , preventing them from discussing matters which could give rise to a conflict of interest .
12 For example , posing the question ‘ What happens if the stationery replenishment procedure fails ? ’ could give rise to a variety of answers .
13 The change in a , may well give rise to a change in savings behaviour ( savings being influenced by the degree of regression to the mean ) , and this may modify the conclusions .
14 The Government could scarcely have been more out of touch with the people at large , and was still , in any case , terrified that Jacobinism might even then give rise to a revolution at any moment .
15 Although the pejorative term ‘ correlational sociolinguistics ’ is sometimes used by non-practitioners of the subject who appear to make this assumption , Labov himself has expressed the fear that his methods might give rise to a flood of replicated ‘ correlatory ’ studies of little theoretical value .
16 Failure to comply with that instruction might give rise to a charge of obstructing the police in addition to that of obstructing the highway .
17 If the husband elects that his " new " home is to be treated as his main residence , then the disposal to the wife of the former matrimonial home ( or his interest in it ) will give rise to a charge to capital gains tax ; this will be on the gain accruing in respect of the period from when the matrimonial home ceased to be his main residence until the date of the court order or date of agreement between the parties .
18 Any number of circumstances may give rise to a fluctuation in workload thus upsetting staffing predictions .
19 Responses to these questions will be varied , and each will give rise to a number of subsidiary questions .
20 If there were such a mechanism , if a cloud resembling a weasel or a camel could give rise to a lineage of other clouds of roughly the same shape , cumulative selection would have the opportunity to get going .
21 Removal of the need for lawyers to attend court for unopposed adjournments in the Magistrates ' Court ; we believe this would give rise to a saving of about £8.6 million , with a saving on committal hearings of £2 million and a resultant saving in legal aid standard fees of £1 million .
22 Held , dismissing the appeal , that since it was the business of estate agents to act for numerous principals , several of whom might be competing and whose interests would conflict , a term was to be implied in the contract with such an agent that he was entitled to act for other principals selling similar properties and to keep confidential information obtained from each principal and that the agent 's fiduciary duty was determined by the contract of agency ; that since the plaintiff knew that the defendants would be acting for other vendors of comparable properties and would receive confidential information from them , the agency contract could not have included terms requiring them to disclose that confidential information to him , or precluding them from acting for rival vendors , or from trying to earn commission on the sale of another vendor 's property ; and that , accordingly , although the purchaser 's interest in acquiring both properties was material information which could have affected negotiations for the sale price of the plaintiff 's house , the defendants were not in breach of their duty in failing to inform the plaintiff of the agreement to buy the adjacent house , which was confidential to the owner thereof , and the defendants ' financial interest in that sale did not give rise to a breach of fiduciary duty ( post , pp. 941A–B , G–H , 942A–B , G — 943B ) .
23 Even here , the test of imminence discussed in Moss v. McLachlan suggest that there must be a clear and present danger that the conduct in which he is engaging will give rise to a breach of the peace , and it is demonstrable that the constable has no reasonable alternative course of action open to him other than to ask the speaker to desist , as by , for example , calling for assistance .
24 Each notification could give rise to a demand for the excess sum stated in the policy .
25 It may be doubted , for example , that a single act could give rise to a sensation of harassment ; it would be an unusual use of language to say that a person was harassing another by a single act ( such as a wolf whistle ) , since that term generally connotes an element of persistence .
26 Subsequent layers of the same crystal will copy the same flaw , and if the crystal breaks in two it will give rise to a sub-population of altered crystals .
27 He thought that the discount for contingencies should be comparatively small and that the £10,000 the widow received from the estate should give rise to a deduction of £200 from the annual dependency for the accelerated benefit that she received by obtaining it on his death .
28 On an appeal by the plaintiff the Court of Appeal held ( dismissing the appeal ) that in so far as the rules of the club provided that two of its officers were to be responsible in law for the conduct of the club then ( in the absence of an express provision that the officers were responsible for the condition of the club premises ) the rules did not give rise to a duty of care towards individual members to maintain the club premises in a reasonable state of safety and repair .
29 Some drama excerpts would give rise to a lot of discussion about relationships between the characters .
30 Cultural transmission is analogous to genetic transmission in that , although basically conservative , it can give rise to a form of evolution .
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