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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The fact that the plaintiff chose to run the risk should not give rise to volenti , as knowledge of the risk is not sufficient .
2 The presence of some arboreal retentions in early australo- pithecines , and their association with palaeoenvironments that may have been more wooded than has formerly been thought , should also give rise to caution in identifying human origins .
3 It is difficult to see why external links should inevitably give rise to greater control over one 's actions .
4 This dichotomy must surely give rise to resentment , however firmly repressed .
5 In both instances earlier discovery might obviously give rise to great savings in costs .
6 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 .
7 Mere drunkenness will not of itself amount to disorderliness , although it might readily give rise to disorderly conduct .
8 Also many types of road which might otherwise give rise to noise nuisance will have been constructed pursuant to statutory powers after all relevant planning procedures have been complied with and compensation paid where appropriate .
9 ‘ With a very great number of credit grantors not being members of any trade association and others being members of more than one , such a system could not give rise to a fair method of raising a levy .
10 Again in Johnston v Chamberlain ( 1933 ) 17 TC 706 , the taxpayer sought to argue that a payment from a discretionary trust could not give rise to income tax liability on the beneficiary as it was " only when the trustees choose to exercise their discretion by making the payment that the sum gets to the children at all " .
11 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 .
12 Such an agreement could easily give rise to the inference that they intended the passing of property to be similarly postponed ( see Underwood v. Burgh Castle Brick & cement Syndicate , above ) .
13 The shortfall in Northern Ireland of no more than four members could hardly give rise to serious objection .
14 In any case primaries could well give rise to organized campaigning , too expensive to be envisaged by all but the well-heeled .
15 While this may be a means of sharing responsibilities and caring , it may also give rise to tensions in overcrowded households .
16 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 .
17 That implied that a new social configuration may well give rise to new forms of designing …
18 A late application may well give rise to an adjournment , for an Order for leave to file an amended pleading in response , for further particulars , and for discovery arising from the amendment .
19 Such a representation would not give rise to an estoppel , because , as was said in Jorden v. Money ( 1854 ) 5 H.L.C. 185 ( below , p.252 ) , a representation as to the future must be embodied as a contract or be nothing .
20 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 .
21 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 .
22 The advance would not give rise to an income tax charge .
23 They would also give rise to a smaller Schwarzschild mass parameter , and hence greater curvature on the horizon .
24 Thus a government which while adhering to the rule of law narrowly defined , flouted all or most of the practices generally thought to be covered by the rule of law broadly defined would also give rise to doubts about its legitimacy .
25 You had to satisfy the Traffic Commissioners , that what you are proposing would , would answer the cause , would n't give rise to erm great hardships to the travelling public and erm oh you 're preparing a fare increase about a year before it actually came up to , in front of the Commissioners and then he would erm , perhaps make some alterations or give you a date when you could apply .
26 Failure of IC1b would certainly give rise to the conditions which you describe .
27 Occasionally the fungus can ensconce itself in the terminal portion of the urethra , and it may then give rise to symptoms similar to those found in non-specific urethritis .
28 If cells from the region of the early embryo that will normally give rise to the eye are grafted into the region that will form the gut the cells do not form an eye any more but just part of the gut .
29 ‘ 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 .
30 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 .
  Next page