Example sentences of "[noun] [vb mod] [verb] rise to " in BNC.

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1 Certain cash flows may give rise to multiple IRRs or no solution at all .
2 The different approaches necessarily adopted by professional groups may give rise to stereotypical ‘ cardboard ’ images of each other .
3 It is also important to remember that a single impairment may give rise to numerous disabilities .
4 These rules may give rise to larger provisions than the directors may otherwise have made .
5 If so , it is perhaps surprising that a threat of a mere breach of contract should give rise to liability .
6 In literature , as we have remarked already , uncertainty may give rise to cruces , to disputed texts .
7 These sequences may give rise to a kind of play , in which they are exaggerated , inverted or otherwise re-ordered in such a manner that a regular pattern or rhythm emerges in the finished product .
8 Although the pejorative term ‘ correlational sociolinguistics ’ is sometimes used by non-practitioners of the subject who appear to make this assumption , Labov himself has expressed the fear that his methods might give rise to a flood of replicated ‘ correlatory ’ studies of little theoretical value .
9 Mr Smith said he feared that opt-out schools could give rise to a two-tier education system .
10 Their cumulative effect would give rise to the microwave background radiation .
11 The emission of hydrothermal solutions , steam and other gases without significant quantities of fragmental material or lava can give rise to minor landforms .
12 Precipitation on the surrounding mountains may give rise to streams which quickly disappear where they reach the basin , as in the Taklamakan desert of the Tarim basin ( Stein , I933 ) The basin often consists of gentle slopes of graded sediments derived from the surrounding mountains leading to a central saline lake or swamp .
13 Although staff may have been appointed to a post With fixed hours and work schedules , a change in circumstances may give rise to a request for change .
14 Any number of circumstances may give rise to a fluctuation in workload thus upsetting staffing predictions .
15 In certain situations a single set of facts and circumstances may give rise to both a civil claim and a criminal prosecution .
16 Members of this genus are common parasites of the small intestine in very young animals and , although generally of little pathogenic significance , under certain circumstances may give rise to a severe enteritis .
17 The stone ( not a marble , but some kind of limestone ) looked just as one would expect after an operation to remove dirt and accumulated grime , and I do not see why this aspect of the work should give rise to so much concern .
18 It may be doubted , for example , that a single act could give rise to a sensation of harassment ; it would be an unusual use of language to say that a person was harassing another by a single act ( such as a wolf whistle ) , since that term generally connotes an element of persistence .
19 It was expected that case law would give rise to sufficient precedents to flesh out the relatively few guidelines available under UCTA , but in fact cases have been few and not very helpful .
20 A failure to carry out necessary work would give rise to liability .
21 It is also acknowledged and agreed that I will perform my functions hereunder solely for the said parties and neither correspondence relating to the dispute nor any finding or award made by me as expert shall give rise to any right in favour of any person not a party hereto and any such correspondence and finding [ or award ] will be confidential to the said parties and will not be disclosed without my prior written consent , which I will not unreasonably withhold but which may be given subject to conditions .
22 Furthermore , confidence in the exchange value of the dollar was essential since it provided the bulk of the reserve assets in the system : any devaluation of the dollar would give rise to fears that it might be devalued again , and hence there would be a reluctance to hold dollars as a reserve currency .
23 It is clear from Fig. 18.9 and from other similar work that the instability can give rise to well-developed ring-shaped vortices while it is still in the periodic stage .
24 A relaxation of the ligaments in your spine combined with the effect of your changing shape on your posture can give rise to backache .
25 Severe refractive errors can give rise to visual defects of this sort .
26 The two parts are not always interchangeable ; the small difference of 0.08mm can give rise to a cumulative error which could mean that a metric pitch part will not necessarily fit an 0.1″ pitch p.c.b. , and vice versa .
27 In the central area of the visual field distance vision can be surprisingly good , and this disparity can give rise to some particular problems in the use of vision in classroom activities .
28 The Inland Revenue , however , has acknowledged that the delay in receiving their Lordships ' decision could give rise to difficulties for employers completing forms P11D ( return of employees ' expenses and benefits ) for 1991/92 and 1992/93 .
29 ( 7.3 ) unc Divergence in one operand of a PAR may give rise to divergence in the complete construct , since an implementation may choose to run one argument until it can proceed no further before running another .
30 For asymmetric tops , which have three different moments of inertia , there is no symmetry element of order greater than two , and up to three different symmetry species of vibration may give rise to IR bands .
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