Example sentences of "[vb mod] [adv] give [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 I must not give way to it , because it is so unlike me and quite causeless .
2 Mr Browning motioned his wife to be quiet and taking Wilson 's arm conducted her to the door , saying something to the effect that she must not give way to gloomy thoughts and that doubtless she was tired with a young baby still nursing and a house to run .
3 One must not give way to despair .
4 Parties must not give effect to a merger before they notify it to the Commission and for three weeks thereafter .
5 Judicial notions of justice must generally give way to those expressed by Parliament where they are inconsistent .
6 IT IS shameful that some people are saying Britain should not give sanctuary to refugees from the civil war in Yugoslavia .
7 The fact that the plaintiff chose to run the risk should not give rise to volenti , as knowledge of the risk is not sufficient .
8 The court should thus give effect to the rules wherever possible , while at the same time seeking to avoid legalistic interpretation , particularly if this produces arbitrary or irrational results .
9 But then it is only a presumption ; and , as such , it must always give way to the language used if it is clear , and also to all counter presumptions which may legitimately be had in view in determining , on ordinary principles , the true meaning and intent of the legislation .
10 People have to earn your respect and just because they have a big desk , long title or an impressive uniform it does n't mean you should automatically give way to their judgements and decisions .
11 People have to earn your respect and just because they have a big desk , long title or an impressive uniform it does n't mean you should automatically give way to their judgements and decisions .
12 The first is a lack of judicial time particularly when judges in Court of Session must also give priority to criminal cases .
13 It is difficult to see why external links should inevitably give rise to greater control over one 's actions .
14 This dichotomy must surely give rise to resentment , however firmly repressed .
15 Unfettered competition of dog eat dog policies must surely give way to positive employment policies and achieve what desired , a society set free from idleness .
16 But their interests should surely give way to the greater public good in enhancing confidence in the integrity and fairness of the capital markets .
17 Having the capacity of a CD-ROM at its disposal means that palmtop textual databases may soon give way to multimedia .
18 In both instances earlier discovery might obviously give rise to great savings in costs .
19 The absence of intermittent hormonal stimulation in men implies that a similar underlying genetic defect might not give rise to malignant disease until later in life .
20 There was , it seemed , no peculiar distinction , however trifling or minute , which might not give value to a volume , providing the indispensable quality of scarcity , or rare occurrence , was attached to it .
21 On very rare occasions the design might even give prominence to the individual moneyer , the man responsible for the coin 's manufacture .
22 I might even give money to The Campaign for Heavier Helmets today .
23 Mere drunkenness will not of itself amount to disorderliness , although it might readily give rise to disorderly conduct .
24 Also many types of road which might otherwise give rise to noise nuisance will have been constructed pursuant to statutory powers after all relevant planning procedures have been complied with and compensation paid where appropriate .
25 At the same time yes I I 'll happily give way to the honourable gentleman .
26 In any proceeding in which no pre-trial review has been fixed , the district judge may nonetheless give notice to the parties requiring them to appear before him on the day named in the notice , so that the question of giving directions may be considered ( Ord 17 , rr 10 and 11(4) ) .
27 ‘ With a very great number of credit grantors not being members of any trade association and others being members of more than one , such a system could not give rise to a fair method of raising a levy .
28 Again in Johnston v Chamberlain ( 1933 ) 17 TC 706 , the taxpayer sought to argue that a payment from a discretionary trust could not give rise to income tax liability on the beneficiary as it was " only when the trustees choose to exercise their discretion by making the payment that the sum gets to the children at all " .
29 Manjiku was the creature who wanted to be a woman ; the beast that stole children for his own because he could not give birth to them himself .
30 If even one base pair change in DNA can profoundly affect the body , the inclusion of a whole length of foreign genetic material among our own genes could easily give rise to metabolic imbalances and disturbances .
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