Example sentences of "[adv] give rise to [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In both instances earlier discovery might obviously give rise to great savings in costs .
2 This " transphasing " of the mode spectrum will alternately give rise to bistable and Ikeda-type double resonances as the pump parameter A is increased : 8 determines the starting position of the comb relative to the pump frequency .
3 Most of the expenditure was outside the dollar area , and did not give rise to immediate dollar payments .
4 Most routine sale and purchase orders will not give rise to such firm commitments , as the entity could cancel them at will without incurring a severe penalty .
5 But they did not give rise to new grouping systems within or between schools .
6 A band could sign a recording contract , or receive income from live performances or session fees ( the receipt of prize money from a talent contest is tax free and does not give rise to taxable income unless this occurs on a regular basis ) .
7 Environment Secretary Michael Howard commented : " The government remains determined that contamination does not give rise to unacceptable risks to health and safety , to groundwater and the environment . "
8 However , reserves of $6,700 million ensured that this figure did not give rise to undue concern .
9 The absence of intermittent hormonal stimulation in men implies that a similar underlying genetic defect might not give rise to malignant disease until later in life .
10 Where the activity involved is one which would not give rise to insuperable planning objections if it were carried out somewhere else , then the planning authority should do all it can to help in finding suitable alternative premises before initiating enforcement action .
11 ‘ An intestinal infection is of no significance whatsoever in the field of public health because such infection will not give rise to any problems to public health , ’ he told Lord Justice Parker and Mr Tudor Evans during a judicial review of the Ministry 's order to slaughter the chickens .
12 He , however , rightly concluded that the Convention does not give rise to any enforceable rights under English law , but only a direct right in relation to the procedures established by the Convention .
13 Those on the outside form the trophoblast which does not give rise to any structures in the embryo proper but is involved in the implantation of the embryo in the uterus and the formation of the placenta .
14 My noble and learned friend , Lord Keith of Kinkel , has expressed the opinion that these letters , on their true construction , did not give rise to any such implied agreement .
15 The media are also required , when reporting matters which are relevant to imminent legal proceedings , to ensure that their reports do not give rise to any substantial risk of prejudice .
16 But to undertake to pay a certain sum after the sale of a property does not give rise to any implication that the solicitor will be exonerated if no sale proceeds come into his hands .
17 Thus , if in year 1 X is charged under s739 on the income arising in his overseas discretionary trust or in a company owned by that trust and that money is , for instance , then lent to him , the loan of the money would not give rise to any further charge .
18 If even one base pair change in DNA can profoundly affect the body , the inclusion of a whole length of foreign genetic material among our own genes could easily give rise to metabolic imbalances and disturbances .
19 The shortfall in Northern Ireland of no more than four members could hardly give rise to serious objection .
20 Actually , resistance is more likely to occur with prolonged exposure to large dosages which leave only a few ‘ resistant ’ individuals to form the nucleus of the next generation ; and it is one of the characteristics of pests that a few individuals can rapidly give rise to large populations .
21 It is difficult to see why external links should inevitably give rise to greater control over one 's actions .
22 Cocaine addiction does not invariably give rise to physiological addiction and there may be no significant physical effects of withdrawal .
23 That implied that a new social configuration may well give rise to new forms of designing …
24 In any case primaries could well give rise to organized campaigning , too expensive to be envisaged by all but the well-heeled .
25 Mere drunkenness will not of itself amount to disorderliness , although it might readily give rise to disorderly conduct .
26 This may therefore give rise to increased endogenous triglyceride synthesis and release in the form of VLDL .
27 Of course , I could lock the door , but that would almost certainly give rise to unwelcome conjectures … ’
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