Example sentences of "giving [noun sg] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 Captured , he would be forced into giving credence to the coup .
2 The computer did not plan an Agnes or a Paul , but only a prototype known as a human being , giving rise to a large number of specimens which are based on the original model and have n't any individual essence .
3 any claim reported to the insurers more than 180 days after the commencement of the incident giving rise to a claim .
4 By late 1969 , the length had increased , giving rise to a new name .
5 Development begins with the fertilized egg , which is a single cell , giving rise to a number of smaller cells .
6 But if your company has retained a good deal of discretion on key matters , it may be able to impose major changes on your working life without giving rise to a constructive dismissal claim .
7 In the case of smoke other than dark smoke emitted from a chimney , which is giving rise to a nuisance , s.16 of the 1956 Act extends the provisions of Part III of the Public Health Act 1936 , to include smoke nuisances .
8 This dichotomy of surplus extraction and extra-economic coercion in the capitalist mode of production , although giving rise to a variety of state forms , has tended to detract from the role of the state , ideology and all other aspects of the ‘ superstructure ’ within the totality of this mode of production .
9 Artificial insemination by donor ( AID ) , i.e. by a man other than the husband , can be used to achieve fertility where the husband lacks spermatozoa , or is otherwise infertile , or if the husband is a carrier of a genetic disease with a high chance of its being transmitted to a child ; alternatively the husband and wife may both be carriers of the same recessive gene , so that each act of fertilization would have a 25 per cent chance of giving rise to a diseased child .
10 The fossil evidence seems to support the theory that mammals began to exceed reptiles during the Mesozoic , giving rise to a belief in more efficient eating habits .
11 Yet , under the proposals , auditors are required to consider whether the disclosures of matter giving rise to a going concern uncertainty are adequate for the accounts to give a true and fair view .
12 For example , if UK exports or capital inflows into the UK are paid for in sterling , then foreigners have to purchase pounds in foreign currency markets with their own currencies , thus giving rise to a demand for pounds .
13 are not susceptible of any … precise definition as would be necessary to give them utility as practical tests , but amount to the features of different specific situations which , on a detailed examination of all the circumstances , the law recognises pragmatically as giving rise to a duty of care of a given scope .
14 First the mouth will split , giving rise to a disc with two orifices , which gradually move apart , then the disc itself begins to divide , starting at the edges and moving inward until two polyps of approximately the same size are produced .
15 The applicant sought relief on the grounds that ( 1 ) at the time the coroner took his original decision there was considerable evidence before him that the death would not have occurred but for delays experienced by the deceased 's family in contacting the ambulance service and later delays by the ambulance service in responding to repeated calls by the police for an ambulance to come to take the deceased to hospital as a matter of urgency ; ( 2 ) in reaching the conclusion that an inquest was unnecessary the coroner had misdirected himself in law for the reasons , inter alia , that ( i ) section 8(1) ( a ) of the Coroners Act 1988 required a coroner to hold an inquest where there was ‘ reasonable cause to suspect ’ that the deceased had died a ‘ violent or unnatural death ; ’ ( ii ) there had been clear and uncontradicted evidence before the coroner that avoidable and culpable delays by the ambulance service might have been the reason why the deceased 's asthma attack , which could have been treated in hospital , proved fatal , giving rise to a ‘ reasonable cause to suspect ’ that the cause of the deceased 's death was ‘ unnatural ; ’ and ( iii ) against that background , the coroner had erred in law in treating the pathologist 's conclusion as conclusive and had either misdirected himself as to the meaning of ‘ unnatural death ’ in section 8 of the Coroners Act 1988 or failed to apply the law properly to the facts of the case .
16 … If in such a case the circumstances be such at the time when the act or neglect occurs that it should reasonably be foreseen that the person in fact injured thereby might be so injured , then at the time of the injury a relationship giving rise to a duty exists .
17 In my judgment , the Peters case [ 1983 ] E.C.R. 987 and the Arcado case are both consistent with Mr. Tecks ' proposition that there must be either a contractual relationship giving rise to actual contractual obligations , or a consensual obligation similar to a contract ( as in the Peters case ) giving rise to a comparable obligation , for the case to fall within the crucial test in article 5(1) .
18 When the closed path is in a wire loop and the loop is in motion then a force due to the magnetic field is present as well , giving rise to a finite amount of work in the same manner .
19 Alcoholics Anonymous describe Alcoholism as being a physical allergy allied to a mental obsession , giving rise to a threefold illness : " … we have been not only mentally and physically ill , we have been spiritually sick . "
20 If , for some reason , the time of high tide is different at the two ends of a strait , there will obviously develop a strong gradient between the two , giving rise to a tidal current which in narrow straits can become very strong .
21 In the past three years subject has been associated with at least two men other than her husband in circumstances giving rise to a strong presumption that the relationships were of a sexual nature …
22 ( G ) In the event of any occurrence giving rise to a dispute between a party hereto and its Insured or to a claim against a party hereto other than a claim for which this Agreement provides it shall be optional to such party upon notice thereof to suspend the application of this Agreement to such occurrence until such dispute or claim has been adjusted provided that such party shall indemnify the other party hereto against all costs and expenses incurred as a consequence of such suspension in defending its interests in a matter for which this Agreement provides .
23 This has involved close linkages between private and public capital and between mining and other sectors of the economy , giving rise to a core economic bloc which might be termed a mineral-energy complex .
24 Growth The number of users of and applications for high technology metal alloys is expanding rapidly , giving rise to a substantial and sustained growth in demand .
25 There is no offer or tender or the like given or made by the Vendor in relation to the Business which is still outstanding and capable of giving rise to a contract merely by the unilateral act of a third party .
26 South Korea 's principal exports to China — synthetic fabrics , leather , paper and raw materials — were outstripped by imports of bituminous coal , crude oil , petroleum products and cement , giving rise to a $688 million deficit .
27 Its complex wording asked whether abortion should be available where " termination is necessary to save the life , as distinct from the health , of the mother where there is an illness or disorder of the mother giving rise to a real or substantial risk to her life , not being a risk of self-destruction " .
28 Protoplasts from different strains of plant have been joined , giving rise to a completely new variety blending characteristics from each parent .
29 Computer technology was giving rise to a variety of innovative developments , and the field was in general pioneered by the CNAA and its institutions before the universities took up the challenge .
30 Both drugs differ from 5-ASA not only in terms of the dosage but also in the composition of the coating , giving rise to a different bioavailability .
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