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

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1 And it gives support to the idea that treating the colic is important , because the children in the study all had serious health problems as a result of their sensitivity to milk — problems that might have been avoided if they had been taken off cow 's milk at an earlier age .
2 Figure 3.1 gives support to the view that ‘ Perhaps the single most distinguishing characteristic of the Japanese wage structure is the effect of firm size on wages ’ ( Hashimoto 1979 p.1098 ) .
3 The right of copyright gives protection to the originator of material to prevent use without express permission or acknowledgement of the originator .
4 When considering our relationships with Europe , will the Minister explain to the CBI why agreeing to a social charter which gives protection to the young employed , gives equal status to part-time workers and sets decent standards for maternity leave should be a barrier to prosperity , given the experience of France and of Germany ?
5 We are seeking to ensure that the er first area to be built up gives protection to the village of Hambleton and can be restored very quickly .
6 The tortious principle gives protection to the ultimate consumer of a product where the product has caused physical damage .
7 The quality — or modality — of the experience depends less upon the quality of energy reaching the nervous system than upon which parts of the sensory system are activated : stimulation of the retinal receptors causes an experience of light ; stimulation of the receptors in the inner ear gives rise to the experience of sound ; and so on .
8 This hint of physical as well as psychological confrontation with primitivism predictably gives rise to the corresponding image of city apocalypse , presented by Charles , the character with whom as Eliot told Martin Browne he most closely identified .
9 Furthermore , resumption of cohabitation for any period up to six months is not in itself to be taken to condone the behaviour of the spouse which gives rise to the ground for divorce .
10 Similarly the companion should have no tax liability as it is presumably the disposal of an interest in his/her main residence that gives rise to the receipt of £34,000 .
11 Muscle cells come from cells that contain the yellow cytoplasm that is present as a crescent-shaped patch in the egg , a grey patch in the egg cytoplasm gives rise to the nervous system , and so on .
12 This can immediately be seen to be the obvious solution which , on its own , gives rise to the Kasner metrics as will be shown in the next section .
13 It is the term that , on its own , gives rise to the Kasner solutions .
14 Last week Lord Skelmersdale told the Lords that ‘ the government 's decision is that the time has come to implement the 1975 Act … . it is the large number of reservoirs for which no one appears to take responsibility which gives rise to the greatest concern , he added .
15 Self-assembly is a means of organisation identical with that which gives rise to the simple spatial order of crystals , which is a concept readily appreciated by physicists and chemists .
16 In severe cases it gives rise to the condition known as spina bifida .
17 membership of Parliament ; the summoning of a new one , in consequence , gives rise to the need to identify those who will be entitled to sit in it .
18 This confirms Hanson 's reputation for being able to spot cheap assets and sell off unwanted parts profitably , but it also gives rise to the charge that Hanson is involved in asset stripping .
19 This gives rise to the danger of what has become known as the two-thirds , one-third society in which the majority obtains secure well-paid full-time ‘ core ’ jobs and the minority become ‘ marginalised ’ , obtaining less well-paid , part-time , temporary , ‘ peripheral ’ jobs and hovering on the verge of poverty .
20 Reisen is derived from the designation of the aircraft , which gives rise to the worldwide ‘ popular name ’ .
21 That we are able to speak to each other gives rise to the complexity of language-games that we are able to play , yet find it so difficult to describe .
22 The feature of human culture and human activities that gives rise to the representation problem is above all that human communities embody norms , and it is this notion that I shall principally discuss .
23 It is the notion of a norm that perhaps gives rise to the central representation problem .
24 This stripe , which gives rise to the alternative name for this area , the striate cortex , is visible to the naked eye in sections of the human brain .
25 The central problem with which holism has to deal — the problem that gives rise to the holist view I shall now examine — can be very simply expressed .
26 Once recognized , it gives rise to the unfulfillable desires which constitute the unconscious .
27 All these studies have revealed considerable variability in the sensitivity of InsP 3 -induced release , which gives rise to the phenomenon of ‘ quantal calcium release ’ .
28 One can say ( he held ) that it is absolutely true that a certain characteristic always gives rise to the property of prima facie obligatoriness .
29 PRE-EXISTING HEALTH CONDITIONS AND PREGNANCY — the only exclusions are in respect of any claim where at the time of taking out this Insurance ( i.e. making your booking ) the person whose condition gives rise to the claim ( whether the Insured , the travelling companion or other person not travelling ) is either : —
30 This , of course , gives rise to the often-remarked feature of discussions that , while their coherence will be clear to the participants , they are far from clear to the detached viewer/reader looking at a transcript and not in tune with the immediate situation .
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