Example sentences of "arise [adv] from [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It is significant that one of the first major published attacks on Indirect Rule was written by a Northern Nigeria DO , Walter Crocker , whose animus against the system clearly arose not from disagreement with its basic principles but from the fact that DOs were allowed so little responsibility within it .
2 Industrial policy seeks to offset market failures in production which do not arise directly from scale economies in the domestic market and the imperfect competition to which these give rise ; offsetting the latter is the object of competition policy .
3 This theory , developed by Frobenius , Molien , Schur and Burnside ( see [ 92 ] ) is of vital importance today [ 92 ] , [ 28 , Chapter 12 ] , [ 53 ] ) in the theory of finite groups and also in representing certain groups which arise naturally from symmetry considerations in chemistry and physics .
4 In addition , there are international forces at work arising especially from membership of the European Community .
5 Where the holder of a bill has a lien on it arising either from contract or by implication of law , he is deemed to be a holder for value to the extent of the sum for which he has a lien .
6 He thanked her for coming and saw her off the premises , but he was left wondering at her distress which seemed to arise more from fear than from grief .
7 Even so , the unpleasantness of these duties arises less from contact with things which the police consider either literally or metaphorically unclean ( such as decomposed bodies and the ‘ dregs and scum of society ’ ) , and more from the risk the police run of displaying emotion .
8 Americans knew far too much about the reality of strikes to accept a film in which , in the words of James Shelley Hamilton , ‘ the trouble arises not from working conditions but from a professional trouble-maker and is solved not according to any principles but by an act of sheer moronic terrorism ’ .
9 Moreover I agree with her that , if there is to be a right to recovery in respect of taxes exacted unlawfully by the revenue , it is irrelevant to consider whether the old rule barring recovery of money paid under mistake of law should be abolished , for that rule can have no application where the remedy arises not from error on the part of the taxpayer , but from the unlawful nature of the demand by the revenue .
10 Social distress arises directly from self-image .
11 Still , there is an alternative tradition in Western thought , one which has never become ‘ official ’ but which nevertheless arises spontaneously from experience .
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