Example sentences of "will [verb] rise to " in BNC.

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1 Responses to these questions will be varied , and each will give rise to a number of subsidiary questions .
2 If consent makes a touching lawful , then it must follow that if a patient withholds consent , if he refuses to be touched by a doctor , any further touching will be unlawful , and will give rise to civil and criminal liability .
3 Some cells migrate beneath the future skin and will give rise to pigment cells .
4 There are two processes , one on either side that will develop into the lower jaw ; two further processes that will form the cheeks and upper jaw , and a central process that will give rise to the nose .
5 It is pointed out that in many instances much of the needed supporting evidence will have to be produced by the auditors themselves , which in turn will give rise to independence issues .
6 At one extreme , it may mean that the world will not contain an example of any single human being doing that thing ; at the other end , it may merely mean that if a group of human beings adopt a norm requiring that behaviour , the norm will often be broken , its observance will give rise to a good deal of anxiety , those who comply without anxiety to the norm will be unusual in other respects , and so forth .
7 It is therefore likely that a combination of conditions will occur during the next 50 years which will give rise to an Arctic ozone hole unless both CO 2 and chlorine emissions are curbed .
8 This extra consumers ' expenditure will give rise to additional income of £40 million in those domestic industries producing the required goods and services .
9 Instead they will prefer to remain liquid , and this will give rise to a speculative demand for money in preference to other forms of financial wealth .
10 The divergence of tissue lineages preceding implantation segregates three precursor populations : one that will give rise to the trophoblast , another that generates extra-embryonic endoderm and a third , the epiblast ( embryonic ectoderm ) , from which is derived the entire fetus and the extra-embryonic mesoderm ( 1 ) .
11 Of particular interest in the mouse is the observation that up to the 8th day of gestation the isolated embryonic region will give rise to transplantable tumours when placed beneath the testis or kidney capsule ( 16,17 ) .
12 All of the following activities will give rise to a need to communicate with media and therefore the need for a carefully selected list of those who will be interested .
13 Late payment of VAT will give rise to severe consequences , in the form of punitive interest charges .
14 It is for the housing authority to decide whether they have reason to believe the matters which will give rise to the duty to inquire or to the temporary housing duty .
15 It is for the housing authority , once the duty to inquire has arisen , to make the appropriate inquiries and to decide whether they are satisfied , or not satisfied as the case may be , of the matters which will give rise to the limited housing duty or the full housing duty .
16 Each of the duties referred to , once established , is capable of being enforced by injunction and the breach of it will give rise to a liability in damages .
17 The duty of the council has been established and is capable of being enforced by injunction and any breach of it will give rise to a liability in damages .
18 Of these : had been loaded previously so : have arisen from ( 100 — A ) per cent of the records , and the percentage of synonyms in these later records is : These records will give rise to ( 100 — B ) per cent of the total accesses to the file .
19 In order to promote these purposes the Secretary of State , normally on the advice of the Health and Safety Commission , has power to make ‘ health and safety regulations ’ which will give rise to civil liability except in so far as they provide otherwise .
20 In other words a fire caused by negligence or due to a nuisance will give rise to a cause of action .
21 This will give rise to a particular social and political system ( synthesis ) which will , as the dominant structure , throw up its own antithesis , and so on .
22 Even here , the test of imminence discussed in Moss v. McLachlan suggest that there must be a clear and present danger that the conduct in which he is engaging will give rise to a breach of the peace , and it is demonstrable that the constable has no reasonable alternative course of action open to him other than to ask the speaker to desist , as by , for example , calling for assistance .
23 Subsequent layers of the same crystal will copy the same flaw , and if the crystal breaks in two it will give rise to a sub-population of altered crystals .
24 Nevertheless , whatever the grouping , one major distinction will remain and this will give rise to a fundamental conflict for the teacher .
25 The important molecular property connected with Raman spectra is therefore the polarizability , and a vibration will give rise to a Raman line if it leads to a change in the polarizability of the molecule .
26 If there are m molecules in the unit cell , each of the internal motions of the molecule will give rise to m components .
27 a molecular vibration will give rise to a fundamental band in the IR spectrum if , and only if , the symmetry of the vibration is the same as that of one or more of the vectors x , y , and z [ see Fig. 5.15(a) ] .
28 a molecular vibration will give rise to a fundamental band in the Raman spectrum if , and only if , the symmetry of the vibration is the same as that of at least one component of the polarizability tensor , a , of the molecule [ see Fig. 5.15(b) ] .
29 Some of the dissolved minerals are ‘ temporary ’ hardeners and will be removed if the water is heated above 70°C , but this will give rise to fur or scale , not just in kettles but in other hidden parts of the hot water system .
30 For all of these types of capital allowance , where , on sale , the disposal proceeds exceed the cost of the asset less the allowances claimed , the disposal will give rise to a clawback of allowances equal to the smaller of the excess and the allowances claimed .
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