Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] rise to [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In coming to a conclusion on whether these proposals should be called in for his determination , my right hon. Friend will consider the proposals in terms of whether they raise issues of national or regional significance or give rise to substantial controversy .
2 15.1.2 neither completion of this Agreement nor publication of the Work will constitute or evidence any breach of any partnership or other contract or any breach of any contractual , fiduciary or other duty between the Authors ( or either of the two individuals together referred to as ‘ the Authors ’ ) or the Company or any third party ; or give rise to any other liability on the part of the Authors ( or either of the two individuals together referred to as ‘ the Authors ’ ) or the Company to any third party ; or give rise to any liability on the part of the Publisher to any third party .
3 In excessively crude shorthand : there are light-coloured rocks that form themselves into sharp peaks and very explosive volcanoes ( Mount St Helens , Krakatoa ) on the outside of the Line ; while there are dark-coloured rocks that give rise to rounded hills from which flow copious amounts of benign lavas ( Mauna Loa ) within it .
4 Hence , molecular associations that give rise to large exothermicities are also associated with large adverse entropy changes , and the two effects work in a compensatory manner [ 6 ] .
5 Now , one of them will rotate to the right , one will rotate to the left what you need to be able to do is to identify the condition that will give that give rise to optical isomers , in other words , to be able to say yes , that molecule will have optical isomers .
6 9.7 Distribution of post-holes : ( a ) found during excavations at Petters Sports Field in Surrey ; ( b ) and ( c ) show an archaeologist 's interpretation of the structures that gave rise to medium depth and deep post-holes , respectively .
7 The conference that gave rise to these events was organised by Donald Johanson , who unearthed Lucy 's half complete skeleton in 1974 at Hadar in Ethiopia , about 1100 miles north of where the Laetoli trails were uncovered between 1976 and 1979 .
8 Phages from plaques that gave rise to identical signals on both filters were purified by another round of plating and screening and were then subcloned to Bluescript plasmids according to the manufacturer 's ( Stratagene ) instructions .
9 Substantive matters such as hours of work , overtime and shift working are covered by complex legislation that gives rise to legal battles over interpretation .
10 Although crustal collisions may involve intra-oceanic as well as continental-margin island arcs , it is the convergence and eventual collision of continental crust that gives rise to intercontinental collision orogens ( Fig. 3.15 ) .
11 In any operations that include the use of soap , the hardness is detrimental , because lime soaps are formed that waste soap and give rise to sticky deposits on fabric and machines .
12 An identical combination of light rays will strike the eye of each observer , will be focused on their normal retinas by their normal eye lenses and give rise to similar images .
13 On the one hand , the commitment of the Soviet leadership to scientific and technical progress , as reflected in the comparative size of the R and D effort , was confirmed in the new larger study ; on the other hand , it was clear that the institutional framework was excessively bureaucratic and give rise to economic behaviour which actively discouraged innovation .
14 Sex-linked Abnormalities , which affect the sex chromosomes , and give rise to various abnormalities , of which some cause mental handicap .
15 Valence-valence excitations and valence-virtual excitations may be considered together , and give rise to valence-electron excitation spectra .
16 The marketer , therefore , needs to understand the needs or wants that inspire individual motivation , and give rise to particular forms of purchase behaviour .
17 Such resistances raise the attenuation constant to a finite value in the pass bands and give rise to finite power dissipation in the filter .
18 Both countries had been over-producing against their OPEC quotas for some time , helping depress prices gradually and giving rise to familiar bouts of recrimination between them and other member states with higher absorptive capacities for revenues .
19 In the laser the nonlinearity leads to competition between these two types of behaviour , and gives rise to unstable behaviour as the injected signal is increased from zero ( stable self-excited laser , as discussed above ) to a value high enough to slave the laser to the injected signal frequency , where the response is again stable .
20 These variations involve very small changes in globally and annually averaged insolation , but give rise to major changes in the spatial distribution of heating .
21 The economic experience of the 1970s had exacerbated existing regional problems as well as giving rise to new ones .
22 One of the problems which Lloyd and Beveridge ( 1981 ) identified as giving rise to poor performance on the part of young receivers of messages was the phenomenon they referred to as ‘ premature selection ’ .
23 The only difference is that whereas in the cases seen previously ( 59 ) — ( 84 ) , perception is represented as giving rise to true knowledge , in ( 85 ) — ( 87 ) above it is depicted as giving rise to a false impression .
24 Accordingly the Royal Commission on Civil Liability and Compensation for Personal Injury recommended a different approach ( but only for death or personal injury ) in the form of a parent statute which would empower a Minister to ‘ list ’ dangerous things or activities as giving rise to strict liability .
25 Other instances offered as giving rise to meritless acquittals were where protestors invaded military bases or private farmlands .
26 What the third defendant is asserting is a statutory cause of action under the Act of 1978 , the only necessary ingredients of which are that a person or persons , namely the plaintiffs , have against the third party a cause of action in respect of the same damage as gives rise to that person or person 's cause of action against the third defendant .
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