Example sentences of "result from [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 These differences might result from epidemiological differences in the populations studied .
2 Yet it is absolute in the sense that it informs the spirit and the circumstances of our actions , which means that acts of violence would still be wrong although they might result from moral considerations and moral decisions , and in the sense that the attainment of desired ends could never justify the means used to attain them .
3 An official source was quoted on Jan. 18 as saying that Saddam Hussein alone bore " the full responsibility for all his actions and what may result from such actions " .
4 This low growth will result from such factors as inflation , energy costs , environmental constraint and low population growth .
5 If he thought instant bankruptcy would result from such disclosures , he must be no less earnest to become a bankrupt for the just advantage of his creditors than he would have been resolute not to fail by collusion for the purpose of defrauding them .
6 The low birthweight may be caused by external factors , such as smoking during pregnancy ; premature babies , which may result from insufficient standards of antenatal care , will be highly prone to early infection .
7 Also vulnerable are families under great stress , which may result from financial difficulties , marital discord , social isolation , or poor health .
8 If the UK economy were principally a national economy , its external relations would result from internal surpluses ( or deficits ) and broad specialization .
9 A new emphasis on regional marketing will result from organisational changes .
10 After the Second World War there were no significant revolutionary movements in the defeated countries ; and in Eastern Europe , with the exception of Yugoslavia , the major changes in political regimes did not result from indigenous revolutions but were largely imposed by the Soviet Union .
11 A minor simplification of the RES would result from these arrangements .
12 He has written to Michael Heseltine , President of the Board of Trade , giving him warning that substantial unemployment could result from artificial constraints on the business .
13 As Herman explains , ‘ [ c ] ollective action may result from structural ties between firms that integrate their interest and facilitate coordination between them — such as a common ownership interest — or it may arise out of a recognized common interest or mutual business interdependence with minimal personal contact and communications among the companies and their officials .
14 These highly restricted distribution patterns may result from unusual patterns of behaviour or even physiological differences between males and females that somehow affect the growth of these fungi ; but the precise mechanisms behind this extreme specificity remain unclear .
15 The serious symptom of phenylketonuria is the development of mental retardation , sometimes accompanied by convulsions , which results from toxic products formed by the body 's attempt to bypass the block .
16 In such a theory the state is seen as not merely helping to reproduce the capitalist system in contradictory ways , but as being itself shaped by the class struggle which results from those contradictions .
17 The heightened sense of distinctiveness which results from these conditions is likely to be marked by strenuous efforts to maintain linguistic distinctiveness .
18 One of the difficulties that results from these cuts and that tax has been that there had been so numerous that it ca n't keep count of how many times they 'd changed the goal posts , how many times they imposed cuts , but you know a lot of the government 's ideas are that it 's money , money , money , but it 's not all financial , it 's been physical and mental .
19 One example is a unique zero-point quantum force between closely spaced metal plates known as the Casimir force , which results from unbalanced pressures in the zero-point energy due to the presence of the plates .
20 PGA consists of five electrophoretic isozymogens ( Pg 1–5 ) and is remarkably heterogeneous , as evidenced by an extensive protein electrophoretic polymorphism resulting from multiple haplotypes containing different combinations of the individual PGA genes and one or more post-translational modifications of the primary gene products .
21 The proportion will vary between 40 and 80% in nuclei from different female fetuses , most of the variation resulting from technical reasons such as , for example , the number of nuclei which flatten on the slide with the body in an easily observed peripheral position .
22 Convention be interpreted as meaning that there must be a connection between the actions against the various defendants ? ( b ) If question ( a ) must be answered in the affirmative , does the necessary connection between the actions against the various defendants exist if the actions are essentially the same in fact and law ( einfache Streitgenossenschaft ) , or must a connection be assumed to exist only if it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings ( for example , in cases of ‘ notwengide Streitgenossenschaft ’ ( compulsory joinder ) ) ?
23 The rule laid down in article 6(1) therefore applies where the actions brought against the various defendants are related when the proceedings are instituted , that is to say where it is expedient to hear and determine them together in order to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings .
24 These include : * emissions of carbon dioxide from burning coal , oil and gas ; * local air pollution caused by vehicle emissions ; * rising levels of water abstraction , threatening to dry out streams ; * water pollution resulting from agricultural chemicals and wastes , industrial emissions and acid rain ; * loss of countryside and open spaces to roads , housing and other development ; * damage to habitats and associated loss of wildlife , with one per cent of sites of special scientific interest ( SSSIs ) suffering potentially irreversible damage every year ; * damage to wildlife , landscapes and communities by sand and gravel extraction , notably for the expanding roads programme .
25 Normally the Japanese would have to accept the squeeze on profit margins resulting from higher costs per chip and lower prices — and indeed memory-chip prices are falling in most markets as producers chase slumping demand .
26 First , writers such as Badie and Birnbaum ( 1983 ) or Moore ( 1967 ) operating from a broad historical perspective suggest that states have a distinct character resulting from long-term processes of political development .
27 In the case of disclosure of information on defence , international relations , crime , information resulting from unauthorised disclosures or entrusted in confidence by a crown servant , sections 2–6 make disclosure an offence if made without lawful authority and causing damage to the public interest .
28 The ITEM Club report concludes that any boost to growth or employment resulting from Labour policies would be short-lived and would be undermined in the medium term by the negative effects , including higher inflation and a worsening trade position .
29 This projection , based on modest assumptions of growth in demand , does not fully take into account reductions in working hours or demands resulting from technological advances .
30 For predicting the amounts and timing of future outflows resulting from existing commitments and the ability of the governmental unit to meet these when they come due .
  Next page