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

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1 Simple scales give experience of balance , mass and comparison .
2 Marital pathology is fully recognised by those who give support through marriage counselling .
3 Slugs tend to concentrate in such refuges , presumably because they give protection from desiccation .
4 They are essential for a healthy nervous system and they give protection against infection , aid in energy production and promote growth .
5 A good diet should maintain health , provide energy , promote growth , and give protection against disease .
6 Share prices give thumbs-down to Budget
7 But it has to be reiterated that the CTP does not explain these observations : it does not explain how the impinging events give rise to awareness of those events .
8 Normally a modest stream , it occasionally becomes a torrent after a downpour and , when held up by a high tide-can give rise to flooding in the lower part of the town as , spectacularly , in 1914 and 1935 .
9 Most of the seminal papers which give rise to paradigm shifts , and the creation of new journals to publish new subjects or combinations of subjects , are first published in the core journal set for the earlier research front , and the clusters which define the new research front may not include the journal which first published the paper which led to its inception .
10 For a combination all three components exist , though only a 1 and e components give rise to IR transitions from the ground state .
11 These results suggested that open complexes formed at the φ29 P A2b and P A3 promoters are unstable , and that initiated complexes are stable enough to resist the heparin challenge and give rise to elongation complexes .
12 Negative Richardson number corresponds to a destabilizing density gradient ; both shear and buoyancy give rise to turbulence generation .
13 If you are subject to an express or implied mobility clause , which covers the move to a new base , the mere closure of the office or factory where you work at present will not in itself give rise to redundancy .
14 The insults or stresses which cause the imbalances and so give rise to disease can be of two types :
15 For these studies on early B cell ontogeny , the Long transgenic mice , particularly those with high copy numbers , could be used in recently described stromal/factor-dependent systems which give rise to non-transformed pre B/progenitor B cell lines ( 57-60 ) .
16 This is the scheme according to which material conditions give rise to class relations which at first develop in direct response to these material conditions .
17 The most common group caused by these abnormalities are disorders of the central nervous system , which give rise to anencephalus , hydrocephalus , and spina bifida ; these affect one child in five hundred , and may be almost immediately fatal or treated to avoid severe mental handicap .
18 The legislature creates a rather abstract mandate and an agency to implement it , while only defining explicitly the offences which give rise to prosecution .
19 About wet conditions that may be dangerous but give rise to regeneration , and scorched ones that appear daunting but may lead to growth . ’
20 These deficiencies give rise to dissatisfaction in those who can see increasing inequalities in a society where suburbanites and those in the smaller towns and cities of the south of England have experienced large material gains through house-price increases and tax changes .
21 In broad and generalised terms , visual defects give rise to loss of clear vision , loss of central vision , or loss of peripheral vision , the visual field may be reduced or interrupted .
22 To me it seems that beauty , and indeed the qualities and forms which give rise to beauty , only exist for a consciousness .
23 The rewards and their distribution become a part of the social order and thus give rise to stratification ( Davis and Moore .
24 These inequalities inevitably give rise to resentment .
25 Those presuppositions of a selector , which , if not satisfied by the selectee , give rise to inappropriateness , will be termed the collocational restrictions of the selector .
26 In CH 3 X , the a 1 modes give rise to dipole changes parallel to the C-X axis , and the e modes give rise to dipole changes perpendicular to that axis .
27 In CH 3 X , the a 1 modes give rise to dipole changes parallel to the C-X axis , and the e modes give rise to dipole changes perpendicular to that axis .
28 But these are not the only areas of the agriculture and food industry which give rise for concern .
29 However , the detailed workings of the supplementary-benefit system give rise for concern .
30 Ten units each in two stages structured for practice in special vocabulary , language use , and extension activities which give opportunity to practice language in a less controlled way .
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