Example sentences of "arise from [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 These can arise from a great variety of causes .
2 Our results show that the causal agent exits the wounded cotyledon when phloem translocation is blocked , so the systemic effect must either arise from a chemical signal travelling through a route that does not involve the transport of photosynthate , or a physical signal .
3 Conversely , emotional or mental problems can arise from a physical cause , as was the case with the victim of the instant coffee , and this is even less likely to be recognized by orthodox practitioners .
4 ( Gladstone 's dress , Housman 's fashion and Marsh 's livery have no obvious warrant in the Horatian text , but may arise from a common " poetic " idea of Nature as clothing . )
5 This chapter examines a study , where , at the outset , the analysts were not entirely clear what could be achieved by using soft systems analysis , but felt it would provide an overview of the situation , enabling ideas to be formulated about new relationships that would arise from a fundamental change in role .
6 For others , the feeling of being trapped may arise from an early blueprint drawn up when they were literally helpless and unable to do anything about an intolerable situation or to get out of it on their own .
7 The problems that may arise from an individual pupil 's needs must also be addressed , and possible solutions proffered .
8 The obligation may arise from an express term in the lease or may be implied by statute : e.g. the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 , ss. 11 and 12 , which require the landlord to repair the exterior and structure of premises , where the lease of a dwelling house is for less than seven years .
9 The monitoring network has become known as the radioactive incident monitoring network ( RIMNET ) and has , as its prime responsibility , the detection of abnormal increases in radiation levels within the UK of the kind that might arise from an overseas nuclear accident .
10 Caution may arise from the civil servants ' commendable desire to protect their Minister from criticism or embarrassment , but it may also result from Ministerial reluctance to contemplate unpopular options .
11 They do not arise from the continuous political efforts of managers who , hoping they will have a short tenure of office , try to make their mark by some evident organizational change .
12 A detailed breakdown of the range and depth of experience is not attempted here , and should arise from the various questionnaires currently being circulated [ … ? ] .
13 Such a disaster can only arise from the inherent structure and culture of the company .
14 Much of the savings , in the official view , will arise from the new structure 's needs for fewer managers , but even that is less than convincing for there is great scope for an increase in bureaucracy , from the need to dispatch the business deriving from the newly acquired functions to the formation of twice the number of existing education , roads and social work departments . ’
15 A second difficulty could arise from the Labour Party rule ( again dating from 1981 ) that a Leader in office as Prime Minister can be challenged for the Leadership at a Party conference if an election is requested by a majority of the conference on a card vote .
16 But some of the problems , particularly those of provision of hospital services in inner-city areas , do arise from the progressive reallocation of funds since the introduction of RAWP .
17 For Oakeshott the authority of respublica does not arise from the mere existence of a rule of recognition .
18 The league programme had not been free from the upsets that could arise from the organizational confusion of most Edwardian football clubs .
19 Several health problems may arise from the uncontrolled ong term abuse of self administered laxatives but this study focuses only on anthranoid laxatives and their relation to the development of colorectal cancer .
20 It does not arise from the old style but in opposition to it .
21 Ageist assumptions connecting old age with ill-health can often arise from the extreme social isolation and withdrawal experienced by many older people , the self-neglect that this can cause , and the illness that then arises from this neglect .
22 Margaret of Carlisle , 47 , was widowed two years ago and knew at first hand the financial problems that can arise from the sudden death of a loved one and the trauma of finding that her partner was inadequately insured .
23 Do these differences arise from the local packing of cations and anions , or does the random network of chains and planes of silicate , for instance , impose the main constraint ?
24 It was recognised in these cases that an indeterminate sentence could properly be passed in a case where dangerousness arose from a non-treatable personality disorder .
25 This encouraging trend arose from a tremendous idealism about education in the 1960s and early 1970s .
26 A opportunity arose from a primary study of proliferation in gastric malignancy to investigate BrdUrd labelled gastric mucosa .
27 The charges arose from a 1983 investigation of alleged sexual abuse by Buckey , his mother Peggy McMartin Buckey , and several members of staff at the family-owned McMartin kindergarten in Los Angeles .
28 Often the need for help arose from a specific pressure such as damaged or lost equipment or from a life event like moving house or the birth of a child .
29 The nationalization of local politics arose from a specific combination of economic , social and political processes which no longer applies .
30 In the Panopticon , the flow of information was dependent on a special architectural configuration : it arose from a specific spatial ordering of the relationship between watcher and watched .
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