Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] rise to a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Might n't it merely give rise to a new , psychologistic , feminist reductionism ?
2 The income arising to the trust can only be taxed under Schedule D , Case IV or V. Payments from the trust can only give rise to a new source under Case V. Those Cases give the taxpayer the benefit of the remittance basis .
3 There would have been no defence ( just as in Reg. v. Lawrence ) if the charge had been laid under section 15(1) and , as in Reg. v. Lawrence and the present case , it was the Crown 's resort to section 1(1) which alone gave rise to a legal problem .
4 Exercise stimulates blood flow to the skin and so gives rise to a healthy appearance .
5 It is clear that insubstantial changes will not give rise to a new copyright ( or right to prevent unfair extraction ) but what is the position when a database has changed considerably from its original form but this has happened incrementally over a period of time ?
6 But if , at the time the shares are subscribed they carry no voting rights for , say , the first five years , this does not give rise to a chargeable event when the five years have elapsed , because the entitlement to vote after five years exists from the outset .
7 The sale of business assets above will not give rise to a qualifying merger .
8 ‘ 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 .
9 Reason : ‘ To ensure that the operation of the plant does not give rise to an environmental hazard or danger to public health ’ .
10 Condition : ‘ Wastes shall be initially blended before incineration and the plant operated in such a manner as to ensure that the flue gases discharged to the atmosphere are such that they do not give rise to an environmental hazard or danger to public health ’ .
11 Despite his wonderfully unattractive and humourless appearance , his exotic origins nonetheless gave rise to an extraordinary rumour .
12 Durkheim said that simple societies were held together by ‘ mechanical solidarity through likeness ’ : people were united by the similarity in the labour and the general social roles they performed , which also gave rise to a homogeneous conscience collective .
13 This report , which culminated in the 1967 Sexual Offences Act , also gave rise to a two-part ‘ Man Alive ’ feature called ‘ Consenting Adults ’ ( BBC ) , which dealt in separate weeks with men and women .
14 The proximity of such natural beauty to a thriving merchant city also gave rise to a native school of Bristol artists initially closely related to the Romantic poets .
15 The three equivalent M-H bonds of and MH 3 group in a molecule with a 3-fold axis through M then give rise to a symmetric combination of all three stretching motions ( symmetry species a , ) and a degenerate pair of antisymmetric combinations of stretching motions , with symmetry species e [ see Fig. 5.20(b) ] .
16 One of the factors in the argument for right hemisphere reading by deep dyslexics is that they are usually able to read words that are highly imageable , that is readily give rise to a visual image , but they are often unable to read words that are highly abstract ( Richardson , 1975 ) .
17 Each order for goods or services then gives rise to a separate contract , subject to the agreed terms .
18 The character table shows that the y axis also has b 2 symmetry , so this vibration will give a dipole change along y , and will be IR active ( i.e. give rise to a fundamental band in the IR spectrum ) .
19 Most of these heteromorphs were derived from ‘ normal ’ ammonoids , but there is one famous example where an uncoiled form actually gave rise to a conventional-looking ammonoid by coiling up again !
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