Example sentences of "arose from a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | It was recognised in these cases that an indeterminate sentence could properly be passed in a case where dangerousness arose from a non-treatable personality disorder . |
2 | This encouraging trend arose from a tremendous idealism about education in the 1960s and early 1970s . |
3 | A opportunity arose from a primary study of proliferation in gastric malignancy to investigate BrdUrd labelled gastric mucosa . |
4 | The nationalization of local politics arose from a specific combination of economic , social and political processes which no longer applies . |
5 | Often the need for help arose from a specific pressure such as damaged or lost equipment or from a life event like moving house or the birth of a child . |
6 | D. B. MacDonald has speculated on the difficult question of the origin of this view in Islam and has suggested that it arose from a Muslim heresy ‘ in that dark but intense period of theological and intellectual development which stretched from the death of Muhammad for at least two and a half centuries ’ . |
7 | The latest charges arose from a Federal Bureau of Investigation ( FBI ) investigation which involved the secret taping of Gotti 's conversations at his headquarters in Brooklyn , New York City . |
8 | The allegations of personal profiteering by Mr Hussein and his family arose from a Kuwaiti-commissioned investigation into Iraq 's assets by Kroll Associates , a New York firm of financial gumshoes . |
9 | Wilson 's disinclination to protest against the inquiry probably arose from a reasonable belief that any senior politician who did not want such an inquiry had something discreditable to hide . |
10 | The settlement does not , however , protect E&Y from civil suits filed by former investors in S&Ls — the $63m it paid in connection with Lincoln arose from a civil suit . |
11 | The charges arose from a sexual encounter between Smith and Patricia Bowman in March 1991 [ see p. 38139 ] , which he claimed had been based upon mutual consent . |
12 | Little Eddie Paynter from Lancashire arose from a sick bed to hit a mighty six to clinch the Ashes in the fourth Test at Brisbane , and nothing much else mattered after that . |
13 | The angular resolution of the observations was inadequate to show that the source was definitely located at the nucleus , but the strength and variability of the line suggested that it arose from a compact source . |
14 | Erm , the partnership agreement er , arose from a clear conviction by both unions that positive trade union action is better than rhetoric . |
15 | The impetus for the following review of the literature arose from a detailed study of 15 published reports of empirical research in the field of ‘ environmental scanning ’ . |
16 | Israel 's occupation arose from a pre-emptive war against neighbours who had massed on its borders and wanted it to disappear . |
17 | Rather it arose from a fortuitous combination of circumstances which bore little relation to the long-run economic costs of producing and distributing electricity . |
18 | That conclusion arose from a mathematical fact ( that operators did not commute ) , via rather abstract arguments involving the idea that the eigenstates of hermitean operators are the state vectors corresponding to the precise measurement of the observables the operators represent . |
19 | This second relationship arose from an ingenious cover-up to a less than wholly honest piece of political self-enrichment . |
20 | The charge arose from an alleged incident on October 11 last year in Witham . |
21 | In rejecting the Galenic theory that diseases arose from an internal imbalance of the four humors , Paracelsus switched attention to agents invading the body from outside . |
22 | The conference decision arose from an implicit assumption by the Carnegie Trustees that following a three-year funding of successful pilot schemes , subsequent responsibility would be assumed by LEAs . |
23 | The unique features of Bruno 's universe arose from an original blend of several philosophical traditions . |