Example sentences of "[Wh det] result from [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It is the state of pleasurable content of mind , which results from success or the attainment of what is considered good .
2 We know , too , the frequent result of such crude precautions , the often painful unpleasantness-to use a mild term — which results from putrefaction , and which the undertaker assures the family is ‘ quite inevitable ’ … whereas when the body has been prepared by the Operator it keeps the appearance of life for an indefinite period , and the last look remains as a pleasant remembrance to their friends .
3 But the trade war , which results from failure to agree , offers no sort of solution at all .
4 Another possible cause is a condition called corky pit which results from boron deficiency in the soil .
5 Failure to act may be due to reactive inhibition which results from pain or fatigue and acts either as a barrier to repetition of the act or as a drive strengthening any activity associated with its reduction , such as rest ( Rivers 1964 pp 171–2 ) .
6 Africa is characterised by rampant population growth , uncontrolled urban expansion , declining irrigated land resulting in food shortages and progressive deforestation , some of which results from use of wood as an energy source .
7 Only new investment will provide the kick-start needed to escape from recession and reduce the waste of talent and energy which results from unemployment .
8 In Scotland the increase in vehicle kilometres has followed a pattern very similar to that which resulted from deregulation in England .
9 Her second book , Life by the Sea Shore ( 1901 ) , which resulted from work at the Marine Biological Station , Millport , remained a classic for many years .
10 Great attention was paid to the pollution which resulted from contact with them during these periods , with vital purification rituals being prescribed to avert the danger to both individuals and community ( in particular , the male religious community , see below ) and restrictions imposed on their movement , particularly with regard access to the cult , during their times of uncleanness .
11 She illustrates the exuberant flowering which resulted from exposure to painters such as Gustav Klimt , whose richly patterned paintings were so influential in the mosaic-based designs of Teodor Wolf-Ferrari .
12 How can high-bay warehousing be classified in order to identify different degrees of risk which result from equipment layout and complexity over and above the question of differing degrees of combustibility ( this aspect being adequately covered in the Fire Offices ' Committee Rules ) .
13 As has been implied from the comments made , the nurse 's ability to identify patients ' problems with the AL of maintaining a safe environment which result from impairment/loss of the senses , to a great extent depends on an ability to be imaginative and empathetic .
14 Finally , a few words about some physiological problems which result from nutrient deficiencies and weather conditions .
15 Of course , we are all too aware of the physiological symptoms which result from anger and which take much more than a second to show their effect and presence : the forehead bunched in a frown , the staring eyes , the constricted pupils , the clenched mouth and fists , the jaw thrust forward , the reddened neck or face and enlarged arteries due to the increase in the blood supply to the skin .
16 Conversely the benefits which accrue from a fully fledged economic union are by definition more numerous than those which result from membership of a customs union .
17 Under some company policies , all domestic expenses which result from relocation are covered by the payment of a disturbance allowance .
18 While the EC competition rules prohibit inter-company co-operation which stifles competition and innovation , recognition is given to the advantages which result from co-operation and joint ventures which have the overall effect of increasing competition in the Community and benefiting consumers .
19 What is carried ‘ in the mind ’ — in their world of ‘ internal objects ’ — has little chance to be reorganized in a mature fashion because they are continually being pressed into ‘ childhood emotional relationships which result from integration in a pattern demanded by mass production ’ ( Pederson-Krag , 1951 ) .
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