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

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1 This gave rise to a scheme to incorporate into a federation all the previously British-protected emirates in the Gulf south of Kuwait .
2 Furthermore , although the Commission put forward a proposal for a Council Recommendation on banning smoking in public places based on Article 235 , this gave rise to a Resolution of the Council and of the Ministers for Health of the Member States which , whilst it referred to that proposal in its recitals , claimed to be made ‘ having regard to the Treaty ’ .
3 The original valuation regulation was , however , in fact derived from the 1950 Customs Cooperation Council Valuation Convention and this gave rise to a dispute referred to the European Court in the Massey-Ferguson case , as to the legitimacy of using Article 235 in these circumstances .
4 This gives rise to a sequence of domes and intervening saddles which , as the break-up of the continent proceeds and a new ocean is created , are split to form a sequence of ruptured domes and troughs along the newly formed passive margins .
5 This gives rise to a number of advantages for the teacher or therapist .
6 This gives rise to a number of interrelated problems , all of which need to be solved before we have a normal form .
7 On the happening of any event likely to give rise to a claim under this section the Insured Person shall : —
8 Thus , merely shouting and swearing is not itself a breach of the peace , although ( as in this case ) it was conduct likely to give rise to a breach of the peace on the part of another , and there could be an arrest for it on that footing .
9 Three important factors emerged from this discussion , and these gave rise to a research project in which some of these problems were addressed .
10 It is virtually certain that Article 86 gives rise to a cause of action in English law at the suit of a person damnified by its contravention and it does so on the basis of an action for breach of statutory duty so that the court may award damages .
11 v. Ministry of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food the Court of Appeal , while regarding itself as bound by the view that Article 86 gave rise to a claim for damages , held that another directly applicable provision , Article 30 ( dealing with quantitative restrictions on imports ) attracted only the remedy of judicial review .
12 This was held to be incorrect , but irrelevant ; incorrect , because a mere sense of alarm was insufficient to give rise to a fear of a breach of the peace , and irrelevant because the justices had found ( or there was evidence from which they could have found ) that the constables reasonably believed that the defendant 's own behaviour was likely to constitute a breach of the peace .
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