Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] rise to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Most of the expenditure was outside the dollar area , and did not give rise to immediate dollar payments . |
2 | But they did not give rise to new grouping systems within or between schools . |
3 | A band could sign a recording contract , or receive income from live performances or session fees ( the receipt of prize money from a talent contest is tax free and does not give rise to taxable income unless this occurs on a regular basis ) . |
4 | However , reserves of $6,700 million ensured that this figure did not give rise to undue concern . |
5 | 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 . |
6 | Where the activity involved is one which would not give rise to insuperable planning objections if it were carried out somewhere else , then the planning authority should do all it can to help in finding suitable alternative premises before initiating enforcement action . |
7 | But to undertake to pay a certain sum after the sale of a property does not give rise to any implication that the solicitor will be exonerated if no sale proceeds come into his hands . |
8 | This early form of international banking was aided by Europe 's relatively compact size in which different countries used their individual currencies , thus giving rise to foreign exchange transactions . |
9 | The shortfall in Northern Ireland of no more than four members could hardly give rise to serious objection . |
10 | There are numerous experiments in which the cells of the four-to eight-cell stage embryo are rearranged and recombined , always giving rise to normal development . |
11 | The distinction between the intermediate and the aggravated offence has also given rise to adverse comment . |
12 | Migration processes have also given rise to distinctive age patterns around Britain , though the absolute scale of differences between places is relatively small . |
13 | It is essential for the efficiency of a modern financial system to analyse all the securities traded in it , since only then is it possible to determine whether securities are fairly priced or whether they are underpriced or overpriced and hence give rise to profitable trading possibilities . |
14 | At first it was filled with gases that modern organisms would find highly toxic , such as ammonia and possibly hydrogen cyanide — though these are the gases that probably gave rise to organic life . |
15 | It also probably gave rise to considerable north-westerly directed overthrusting in the Highland area , including the great Moine Thrust itself . |
16 | It is difficult to see why external links should inevitably give rise to greater control over one 's actions . |
17 | Offensive odours which emanate from domestic or industrial premises can cause serious annoyance to persons in the locality , and inevitably give rise to public concern , spreading as they do in some cases over a wide area . |
18 | Pickups fitted with metal covers quite often benefit by their removal , as the air gap between the cover and the coils often gives rise to microphonic feedback . |
19 | In many areas local services were provided by numerous different authorities , which often gave rise to acute co-ordination problems . |
20 | Cocaine addiction does not invariably give rise to physiological addiction and there may be no significant physical effects of withdrawal . |
21 | In any case primaries could well give rise to organized campaigning , too expensive to be envisaged by all but the well-heeled . |
22 | Mere drunkenness will not of itself amount to disorderliness , although it might readily give rise to disorderly conduct . |