Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [verb] rise to [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It is the notion of a norm that perhaps gives rise to the central representation problem .
2 The differences between these two races of wild cat support the idea that it was the African that originally gave rise to the domesticated feline .
3 From the single cell , the fertilized egg , come large numbers of cells — many millions in humans — that consistently give rise to the structures of the body .
4 Exercise stimulates blood flow to the skin and so gives rise to a healthy appearance .
5 These paper notes , redeemable in gold or silver were transferable and thus gave rise to the use of paper money in England .
6 The negative sign involves a perturbation to 5 which reverses each tR , and thus gives rise to an oscillation with period 2tR .
7 He suggested that a tendency to report first the material entering the right ear might allow information from the left ear to decay in short term memory and thus give rise to the observed superiority of the right ear .
8 Moments of structural crisis in a nation state are harbingers of revolution and inevitably give rise to the necessary social and political climate for the production of revolutionary literature .
9 As such , the ethnic minorities represent a major demographic strength for parts of urban Britain , though at the same time their presence may have hastened the exodus of better-off whites and certainly gives rise to a very difficult set of policy issues ( Chapter 8 ) .
  Next page