Example sentences of "give [noun sg] to the " in BNC.

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1 I might even give money to The Campaign for Heavier Helmets today .
2 My father did give money to the Arabs to keep his head . ’
3 Why does not he give freedom to the people of Scotland to move about without dipping into their pockets ?
4 As John Major contemplates on the way to Washington whether he should give support to the US plan , he should bear the following in mind .
5 I can not give credence to the 17 per cent .
6 I hope that Opposition Members will give credence to the views of industry and commerce in Northern Ireland , if they hope to attract future investment and employment to the Province .
7 Although the Act gives no protection to a dealer , it will give protection to the first private purchaser providing he was bona fide , etc .
8 George Hirst would contribute in all three departments : his left-arm inswing from round the wicket would give variety to the attack , he could make runs quickly ( never mind that a large proportion would come from pull shots off the stumps ) , and was a superb mid-off fieldsman .
9 Marx saw them as promoting the bourgeois state , which was an advance on feudalism and which , in turn , would give rise to the proletarian state .
10 When oedema of the male genitalia occurs , it may give rise to the intriguingly-named ‘ saxophone penis ’ .
11 Because the insulating characteristics of timber-frame houses are so good they do give rise to the problem known as ‘ interstitial condensation ’ , as was revealed in the television documentary .
12 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 .
13 If cells from the region of the early embryo that will normally give rise to the eye are grafted into the region that will form the gut the cells do not form an eye any more but just part of the gut .
14 Failure of IC1b would certainly give rise to the conditions which you describe .
15 That the Sanskrit matr should give rise to the Greek meter and hence the Latin mater may seem hardly a surprise , since each of these languages influenced its successor .
16 Their cumulative effect would give rise to the microwave background radiation .
17 Without the ERM , countries could competitively devalue their currencies : that would prove as inflationary in future as it has in the past , and it would give rise to the sort of trade frictions that plague the relationship between America and Japan , or worse .
18 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 ) .
19 The answers to some of the questions posed in this booklet may give rise to the need for change .
20 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 .
21 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 .
22 The concept of an implied term , with its inevitable uncertainties , is inconsistent with the nature of an injunction , breach of which may give rise to the sanctions attendant upon contempt of court .
23 683 were whether ( a ) the fact that the Bar Council , which was the accusatorial body , formed part of the Senate , which was the judicial body , meant that fair-minded people would regard the proceedings of the Senate 's disciplinary tribunal as tainted with the appearance of bias and ( b ) the fact that members of the same profession were both the accusers and the majority of the disciplinary tribunal could give rise to the same objection .
24 That paragraph does not give rise to the inference that an appropriation of property is not theft when there is a ‘ consent ’ — if it can be rightly so described — which is founded upon the dishonesty of the defendant .
25 This can give rise to the mistaken belief that cocaine is not an addictive drug .
26 Cannabis may have few immediate withdrawal effects and this again may give rise to the mistaken belief that it is not addictive .
27 Why his Lordship should have concluded that the facts did not give rise to the issue is unclear , but subsequent events have shown that the decision has been of much greater importance for the scope of the right of public meeting than his Lordship imagined it would be .
28 It is not hard to find suitable populations of bodies that could give rise to the observed range of crater sizes today — more on this in section 6.4 and in Chapter 8 .
29 So let us take one of the two decision variables and try to create a possible argument which might give rise to the observed comparative static effects ; this argument is partly backed by some of the questionnaire responses .
30 In particular , it has been asked whether there are political mechanisms , other than dictatorship , that , without restricting the nature of the preferences of voters and the choices that they can make , do not give rise to the non-existence problem .
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