Example sentences of "[noun pl] [vb mod] [adv] give [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 Unfettered competition of dog eat dog policies must surely give way to positive employment policies and achieve what desired , a society set free from idleness .
2 Having the capacity of a CD-ROM at its disposal means that palmtop textual databases may soon give way to multimedia .
3 Parties must not give effect to a merger before they notify it to the Commission and for three weeks thereafter .
4 power considerations will usually give way to efficiency — at least in profit-making enterprises , if observations are taken at sufficiently long intervals [ …
5 In any case primaries could well give rise to organized campaigning , too expensive to be envisaged by all but the well-heeled .
6 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 .
7 It is clear that insubstantial changes will not give rise to a new copyright ( or right to prevent unfair extraction ) but what is the position when a database has changed considerably from its original form but this has happened incrementally over a period of time ?
8 The employment of women with small children or dependent relatives will inevitably give rise to situations which interfere with the nurse 's attendance at work .
9 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 .
10 But their interests should surely give way to the greater public good in enhancing confidence in the integrity and fairness of the capital markets .
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 The shortfall in Northern Ireland of no more than four members could hardly give rise to serious objection .
13 Since ‘ compliance ’ is an administrative definition and since production or treatment processes can constantly give rise to changes in water quality , field men must be ever-vigilant in the face of uncertainty .
14 No one can confidently say that the initial calm which has greeted the news of the deportations will not give way to a far more vigorous reaction .
15 The English courts will not give effect to the acts of an unrecognised government …
16 It is difficult to see why external links should inevitably give rise to greater control over one 's actions .
17 These modes can thus give rise to an Ikeda instability ( which will now have a period rather than 2tR ) provided these modes are resolved into two gain peaks : a high-finesse resonator is thus required for this version of the Ikeda instability , which gives rise to chaos via a period-doubling cascade in parameter regions corresponding to the upper branch of optical bistability { 23 } .
18 Bows , bands and clips can really give height to a style .
19 The explanations in ( 8 ) , ( 9 ) and ( 10 ) are concerned with physical events , but psychological phenomena can also give rise to explanations in different modes , as in ( 11 ) , ( 12 ) and ( 13 ) :
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