Example sentences of "arise from [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Adultery can arise from problems within the family or can disrupt it . |
2 | In other situations , complexities may arise from variations in the Richardson number , as defined above , from place to place . |
3 | The present research will consider cognitive constraints that may arise from limitations in children 's capacities for monitoring their own success at a task and thereby employ a strategic approach to its mastery . |
4 | At this stage it is difficult to assess whether the potential benefits to accounts users which may arise from improvements in audit judgments and financial reporting as a result of regulation can be justified against the costs , particularly at the smaller end of the market . |
5 | And estoppel , similar to estoppel by share certificate , clearly could arise from statements in certificates of debenture stock or in debentures . |
6 | When any major change occurs , provided it does not arise from events beyond our control , you will have the choice of ( a ) accepting the changed arrangements , ( b ) purchasing another available holiday from us at is advertised price , or ( c ) cancelling your holiday . |
7 | Dynamic effects can also arise from economies of scale , and other factors induced by the formation of the CU . |
8 | She experienced a sense of detachment before cutting herself , and the act seemed to relieve feelings of anxiety and tension which usually arose from problems in her relationship with her boyfriend . |
9 | The relevant sections state that ‘ it is a defence for him to prove that the failure arose from circumstances beyond his control . ’ |
10 | The case arose from charges against Ramón Orellana , Febres 's son-in-law and former private secretary , now a fugitive , to whom the payment of $150,000 had allegedly been made [ see p. 37067 ] . |
11 | Also , it will be usual to say that there will be no claim if the liability arose from acts of the acquirer or target ( after completion only ) which are outside the ordinary course of business or undertaken in the knowledge that they will create liability . |
12 | It has become usual that there should be a generally drafted indemnity against all taxation liabilities arising from trading transactions prior to the last balance sheet date and which were not provided for in such accounts , or which arose from transactions outside the ordinary course of business since that date . |
13 | It arose from observations of old people who appeared to welcome and initiate increasing isolation as a release from the problems , pressures and difficulties of life . |
14 | Such thefts often arose from grants of benefices known as precariae ( from preces , the " prayer " or " request " which had to be offered by the recipient ) on church lands . |
15 | The charges arose from events on Feb. 18 when a peaceful rally ended in violence [ see p. 38753 ] . |
16 | Nevertheless , North did testify that Poindexter had supervised the November 1985 shipment of US arms to Iran , an important statement given that four of the five felony charges against the defendant arose from statements to Congress that he had not learnt of the shipment until January 1986 . |
17 | These changes arise from changes in the laminar velocity profile . |
18 | As with XLA , most human genetic disorders arise from mutations in genes that encode currently unknown proteins . |
19 | ‘ Accidents and ill-health are never inevitable ; they often arise from failures in control and organisation . |
20 | Almost all the differences in size and general form of an organism arise from differences in the number , activity and persistence of the centres of cell division . |
21 | Most of the differences in size arise from differences in cell number . |
22 | The above analysis assumes that capital movements only arise from differences in productivity . |
23 | This emphasis on economic theory is important , since many of the controversies concerning economic policy arise from disagreements about the appropriate model of the economy . |
24 | Such claims may be excluded where they arise from circumstances outside the builder 's control . |
25 | Many human developmental abnormalities arise from abnormalities in the moulding of sheets of cells . |
26 | Static welfare losses that arise from departures from competition in output markets are set against longer-run , dynamic gains which may arise from an increase in the supply of innovations that come about in less than perfectly competitive markets . |
27 | The major theoretical problems which arise from explanations of language development as a process of learning verbal behaviours were first presented by Chomsky ( 1959 ) and , in many respects , this still represents the best critique of Skinner 's position . |
28 | Privately , Roxburgh and his assistant , Craig Brown , wondered if the questionable temperament which embroiled Ferguson in court cases arising from incidents off the park would ultimately hinder his progress . |
29 | In Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely and arising from initiatives by Bill Baker , new WEA centres were established at Sutton and Stretham and joined others formed a little earlier at Haddenham , Histon , March and Wilburton — most arranging Terminal courses during the year , while Cottenham founded a WEA branch . |
30 | We were much pressed in argument with submissions that , although fraudulent conduct has become a serious social evil , there are other evils just as grave , or even graver , which have not attracted any special powers ; that if the reason for giving exceptional powers to the Serious Fraud Office is that many frauds involve complicated transactions which are difficult to unravel , then the same could be said of the long and complex trials ( for instance , arising from charges of affray , or of the importation and supply of prohibited drugs ) to which no such powers have been applied ; and that , moreover , the powers of the Office are made available even where the transactions in question are not complicated , since the Act applies to ‘ serious or complex fraud ’ — not ‘ serious and complex fraud . ’ |