Example sentences of "[adv] [vb -s] rise to [art] " in BNC.

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1 It is the notion of a norm that perhaps gives rise to the central representation problem .
2 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
3 It is the reasonable foreseeability of harm arising from one 's conduct which in many types of cases not only gives rise to the duty of care to avoid inflicting such harm , but also provides the test for determining whether a person injured by the careless conduct of another falls within the class of persons to whom a duty of care is owed .
4 Exercise stimulates blood flow to the skin and so gives rise to a healthy appearance .
5 These changes may last many hours , and thermal stimulation especially gives rise to a particularly complex and longlasting expression of the gene .
6 The negative sign involves a perturbation to 5 which reverses each tR , and thus gives rise to an oscillation with period 2tR .
7 One can say ( he held ) that it is absolutely true that a certain characteristic always gives rise to the property of prima facie obligatoriness .
8 A word describing a " concrete " object also gives rise to a " pictorial " trace but an " abstract " word establishes only a verbal trace .
9 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 .
10 To make the experiences and history of society 's criminals less accessible also gives rise to the risk of further marginalising a section of society already relatively powerless .
11 It is interesting to observe that the use of our anti IL-6DBP antibody preparation , while not leading to reduction or elimination of the IL-6 induced band , often gives rise to the appearance of a slow migrating band on the top of the gel ( shown by an open arrow ) .
12 Each order for goods or services then gives rise to a separate contract , subject to the agreed terms .
13 As such , the ethnic minorities represent a major demographic strength for parts of urban Britain , though at the same time their presence may have hastened the exodus of better-off whites and certainly gives rise to a very difficult set of policy issues ( Chapter 8 ) .
14 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 .
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