Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] [verb] rise " in BNC.

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1 This condition normally gives rise to severe swelling , known as oedema , in various parts of the body .
2 A series of small overlaps above give rise to technical and varied climbing , with the odd blindish move making for some entertaining sequences — something which caused a little consternation on my initial freezing encounter .
3 Several of the mare impacts have been dated from the radiometric ages of the welding of the surrounding brecchias to which these impacts probably gave rise .
4 The three equivalent M-H bonds of and MH 3 group in a molecule with a 3-fold axis through M then give rise to a symmetric combination of all three stretching motions ( symmetry species a , ) and a degenerate pair of antisymmetric combinations of stretching motions , with symmetry species e [ see Fig. 5.20(b) ] .
5 Overtones and combinations sometimes give rise to unusually strong bands in IR or Raman spectra by stealing intensity from a nearby fundamental of the same symmetry .
6 Despite his wonderfully unattractive and humourless appearance , his exotic origins nonetheless gave rise to an extraordinary rumour .
7 It was a ‘ sad indictment ’ that some reporting accountants had evidently been issuing unqualified reports in circumstances subsequently giving rise to claims on the fund .
8 These progenitors subsequently give rise to at least nine distinct differentiated cell types .
9 This hint of physical as well as psychological confrontation with primitivism predictably gives rise to the corresponding image of city apocalypse , presented by Charles , the character with whom as Eliot told Martin Browne he most closely identified .
10 Firstly , the Festival of Britain in 1951 and the Coronation in 1953 had focused the eyes of the world on Britain 's streets , and the number of tourists over here in those years gradually gave rise to concern over the embarrassment caused by prostitution .
11 As mentioned earlier , the methods of abatement capable of achieving effective control are governed to some extent by the age of the plant , the older plants probably giving rise to most difficulties .
12 The rapid growth of private charity in these years also gave rise to institutions demonstrating a variety of approaches to the palliation of poverty .
13 Volcanism directly gives rise to predominantly constructional landforms , although not all volcanic activity results in the development of volcanoes since some types of eruption create extensive sheets of lava or fragmental material .
14 The route to the solution of some earth and moon also give rise to eclip oh know ca n't even spell it now , what I 'm trying to say is eclipses when one heavenly body gets in the way of another .
15 Furthermore , housing difficulties frequently give rise to other problems .
16 If trustees make a payment of monies to a beneficiary this may comprise income in the hands of the beneficiary thus giving rise to a tax charge .
17 A word describing a " concrete " object also gives rise to a " pictorial " trace but an " abstract " word establishes only a verbal trace .
18 Pickups fitted with metal covers quite often benefit by their removal , as the air gap between the cover and the coils often gives rise to microphonic feedback .
19 In addition , early cleavage stage blastomeres disaggregated and cultured individually or in small groups frequently give rise to " false blastocysts " which appear to be composed of only TE ( 26 and references cited therein ) .
20 These changes may last many hours , and thermal stimulation especially gives rise to a particularly complex and longlasting expression of the gene .
21 The attempt of the Communist Party to implement Comintern decisions naturally gave rise to the most widely publicized of the movements for some kind of co-operation on the Left .
22 Such species thus give rise to wide and uniform seed shadows .
23 On the other hand , such an approach generally gives rise to very voluminous output neither easy to absorb from the screen of a VDU nor conducive to constructive contemplation when transferred to the continuous stationery produced by line printers .
24 This approach also gave rise to a change in attitudes about the split between the academic and non-academic functions within the Colleges , which encouraged the Principals to make more flexible use of resources .
25 The same incident also gave rise to complaints by a number of members of the public in respect of the conduct of several police officers who had attended it .
26 The incident also gave rise to one of the regiment 's nicknames , ‘ The Red Feathers ’ .
27 A. V. Dicey , the prominent nineteenth-century jurist and by no means an extreme anti-feminist , considered that while distinctions of rights founded on sex often gave rise to injustice ‘ they have this in their favour — they rest upon a difference not created by social conventions or by human prejudice and selfishness , or by accidental circumstances … which split society into classes , but by the nature of things ’ .
28 Chemical weathering frequently gives rise to minerals which are less dense than their precursors .
29 The desirability of ‘ tying up ’ a settlement in one parcel sometimes give rise to a problem for the parliamentary agent in drafting the legislation , the question being whether to put in a protective clause at the outset , or to omit it and negotiate a settlement of such a clause for insertion at a later stage .
30 The proximity of such natural beauty to a thriving merchant city also gave rise to a native school of Bristol artists initially closely related to the Romantic poets .
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