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

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1 This situation gives rise to a conflict between two interests , that of the patient and that of the society in which he lives .
2 Half the gametes will have two of each type and fertilisation of one of these with a normal haploid gamete gives rise to a zygote with a triploid number of chromosomes .
3 The questions which arise in aircraft accident investigation usually relate to the boundaries of radio technology — things such as trying to establish the radio propagation conditions in which some phenomenon or other gives rise to a kink in an instrument landing system localiser or glide slope but only on an intermittent basis , or the reliability of a radio altimeter in an auto-land system during an approach over surfaces with greatly differing radio reflecting characteristics .
4 In this situation , the calculation of minority interest gives rise to a debit balance in the balance sheet .
5 The demand for bank lending gives rise to a flow ( of new bank loans ) .
6 Fault is defined by s. 4 : " negligence , breach of statutory duty or other act or omission which gives rise to a liability in tort or would , apart from the Act give rise to the defence of contributory negligence " .
7 Fault of the defendant means negligence , breach of statutory duty or other act or omission which gives rise to a liability in tort .
8 er , yes my Lord , there 's the prior point that we er , we would submit as indicated in the skeleton of the eleventh of November that on its true construction , erm the central fund byelaw , article ten in particular er gives rise to a payment of a specified sum , ascertain sum , payable forthwith on demand , it 's rather like the example your Lordship gave of the Barclaycard or the cheque , if my learned friend is right
9 Having fewer children , of course , gives rise to a situation which so many 20th-century parents will understand only too well : that one minute there are young babies in the house needing constant attention , while the next , in the twinkling of an eye it seems , Darby and Joan are staring around an empty house and having to re-learn the art of living with each other all over again .
10 The antisymmetric stretch gives rise to a dipole change along z , the molecular axis , and we deduce that this vibration is IR active , with symmetry species .
11 In the Lepidoptera another separate group of globuli cells gives rise to a tract that leads to an additional tripartite Y- lobe ( Pearson , loc. cit . ) .
12 But in view of the fact that different actuaries can come to different answers and Professor Good quotes one where a difference of half per cent gives rise to a difference of a hundred and sixty seven million .
13 A gain is taxed as a balancing charge , while a loss gives rise to a balancing allowance that can be used to reduce taxable earnings .
14 It is as bizarre to suppose that I do not have a clear idea of a particular causal circumstance , say the one which gives rise to a query on the console of my computer , when I am unable to enumerate its elements .
15 The trustees are shareholders and participators in Newco and a loan to a participator gives rise to a corporation tax charge on Newco under s419 TA 1988 .
16 This gives rise to a sequence of domes and intervening saddles which , as the break-up of the continent proceeds and a new ocean is created , are split to form a sequence of ruptured domes and troughs along the newly formed passive margins .
17 Formally , we would have the same force if we assumed ( as many textbooks do ) that a magnetic field moving with a velocity in gives rise to a force
18 It might be objected that when the comparison of habituation and latent inhibition gives rise to a discrepancy , it does so because we have failed to compare like with like .
19 He also commissions M. Bijou de Millecolonnes , who despises the ancients , and whose ‘ lightness , gaiety , and originality ’ are the antipodes of the ‘ solidity , solemnity and correctness ’ of Sir Carte Blanche , to build in a ‘ wild sequestered spot ’ in Regent 's Park a pavilion reminiscent of Nash 's at Brighton , which gives rise to a rumour ‘ that the Zoological Society intended to keep a Bengal tiger au naturel , and that they were contriving a residence which would amply compensate him for his native jungle ’ .
20 Section 61(1) of the Sale of Goods Act defines a warranty as ’ … an agreement with reference to goods which are the subject of a contract of sale , but collateral to the main purpose of such contract , the breach of which gives rise to a claim for damages , but not to a right to reject the goods and treat the contract as repudiated . ’
21 No object can qualify as a possible ontological existent if its notion gives rise to a contradiction .
22 Hence if the construction of the building which is to be the catering premises shuts out light to the adjoining premises it thereby infringes the rights of the neighbours and gives rise to a cause of action for contravention of their easement of light .
23 It is virtually certain that Article 86 gives rise to a cause of action in English law at the suit of a person damnified by its contravention and it does so on the basis of an action for breach of statutory duty so that the court may award damages .
24 Any breach or suspected breach gives rise to a policy indemnity question .
25 This gives rise to a number of advantages for the teacher or therapist .
26 The notion of a duty to respect creditor interests gives rise to a number of conceptual and practical difficulties ( e.g. should present and future creditors be afforded different protection ? ) .
27 Our philosophy gives rise to a number of laws .
28 This gives rise to a number of interrelated problems , all of which need to be solved before we have a normal form .
29 The growth of planning agreements gives rise to a number of concerns .
30 Although , structurally , the acquisition by Newco of Target 's business and assets is the simplest way of effecting a management buy-out , it gives rise to a number of tax issues .
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