Example sentences of "arise from [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The potential hazards that can arise from cabin pressurisation are only one aspect of the many features that aircraft designers must contend with , and engineers are well able to calculate the forces involved and build in the necessary safeguards .
2 I suggest not , and that most long-term core portfolios should contain them , remembering that in the short-term extra volatility can arise from currency fluctuations .
3 The location of the fieldwork meant that little comment could be made in relation to differences which might arise from work in an inner-city area with a significant ethnic minority population .
4 Many class activities can arise from work focused around original written sources .
5 Similar trends are apparent in the series for cumulated inflows , suggesting that the observed changes in the stock do not arise from revaluation effects alone .
6 The Schools Council history team rightly foresaw many difficulties and problems which could arise from empathy work .
7 These different conditions can arise from over-protection or lack of understanding of visual handicap .
8 The counsellor is often able to observe the spark of insight and realization which can arise from contact with another troubled individual .
9 The statement added the IAAF had stressed the serious problems that could arise from interference by civil courts , and such interference posed a grave risk and could ‘ create serious damage to major sports everywhere , particularly in the US for the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996 . ’ .
10 This has two purposes , firstly to illustrate the above assertion about the pervasiveness of layering and secondly to act as a reminder that there are important double diffusive flows that do not arise from instability of vertical gradients .
11 His enthusiastic and entrepreneurial promotion of these studies , however , was combined with a political naïvety that blinded him to the problems that can arise from reliance on external sources of funding in politically charged fields of study .
12 Ceauşescu knew that revolutions do not arise from despair but hope .
13 It should arise from concern and interest in the counsellee , not from a prurient self-interest or inquisitiveness on the part of the counsellor .
14 Sexual dysfunction may arise from fear of pregnancy or parenthood , anxiety as to the possibility of venereal disease , guilt as to a child 's disability , or anger at the sex role thrust upon one by society .
15 Style does arise from subject-matter .
16 At the same time we have to take account of the fact that some of the households ' income will be channelled into saving , and that additional spending on the output of firms will arise from investment .
17 Vulnerability may arise from dependence upon the fiduciary for information and advice , the existence of a relationship of confidence , or the significance of a particular transaction for the parties .
18 Such friction could arise from personality clash , from communication breakdown , from ineffective delivery , from customer resistance to price changes or from competitive pressure .
19 This state may arise from anger , a temper , being contradicted , feeling mortified o from physical pain itself .
20 It was held in Chamberlain v IRC 25 TC 317 that where assets settled by X were invested in shares in a company controlled by the settlor , the whole of the capital of which was held by the trustees themselves , the income arising in the company did not arise from property comprised in the settlement within the meaning of TA 1988 , s672(1) .
21 It can arise from talk overheard on the top of a bus , or anywhere .
22 This is reflected in Articles of Government made under the 1986 Act in the procedures laid down for dealing with the exclusion of pupils from school and with the appeals which might arise from exclusion .
23 Disagreement may arise from failure to agree facts or amounts included in the accounts .
24 But seriously , vacancies will arise from time to time in all areas within the company .
25 There are other arguments that have been made along the same general lines , to the effect that to capture regular processes ( e.g. syntactic regularities ) one must refer to pragmatic concepts ( see e.g. Ross , 1975 ) , arguments that will arise from time to time in the Chapters below .
26 Doctors from the hospital told the coroner that although it was ’ highly unusual ’ for such a thing to occur , such complications did arise from time to time .
27 This arose from discontent voiced both outside and within the Survey .
28 Both crises arose from discontent over the financing of the war , but it is perhaps a measure of the king 's failing powers that whereas in 1340–1 the lead in attacking his ministers had been taken by the king himself , the initiative now rested with a group of lay nobles , chief amongst whom , if some of the chroniclers are to be believed , was the young Earl of Pembroke .
29 He said his financial problems arose from bankruptcy last year .
30 Much of the mutual exasperation arose from disagreement over the appropriate routes to similar goals .
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