Example sentences of "give [noun sg] to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 When the pope nevertheless steadfastly refused to give way , Henry intensified his attack on the church ; in the summer of 1530 he issued a charge of praemunire against fifteen clerics , including the four bishops who had supported Catherine , on the grounds that they had aided Wolsey in the exercise of his legatine authority and thereby given support to papal jurisdiction within his realm .
2 First , the mother lacked parenting skills which had given rise to emotional harm caused to the children .
3 Migration processes have also given rise to distinctive age patterns around Britain , though the absolute scale of differences between places is relatively small .
4 The second of these three articles of agreement had given rise to tripartite action against a rising of west Galician Poles in 1846 .
5 By the autumn of 1283 the danger of Armagnac submission to the immediate lordship of the French crown appeared to have passed , but the behaviour of Philip III 's officers , especially his seneschal of Toulouse , had given rise to great concern among Edward I 's Gascon council at Bordeaux and among his proctors and advocates at Paris .
6 The people of Palau have shown a marked reluctance to alter their nuclear policy to comply with United States ' demands , which in turn has given rise to economic deprivation , intimidation , and violent criminal acts directed against the opponents of the Compact .
7 The distinction between the intermediate and the aggravated offence has also given rise to adverse comment .
8 These limits have given rise to thorny debate in at least two areas which serve as a reminder that it is not only nonhuman animals which are put at risk :
9 During the 1930s , for example , family allowances were seen by increasing numbers of people as a method of combating the falling birth rate which had given rise to widespread fear of an ever declining population .
10 The negotiations , which had reached their seventh round and had given rise to considerable optimism , centred on the creation of internationally managed reception centres in Vietnam .
11 The shortfall in Northern Ireland of no more than four members could hardly give rise to serious objection .
12 However , reserves of $6,700 million ensured that this figure did not give rise to undue concern .
13 This extra consumers ' expenditure will give rise to additional income of £40 million in those domestic industries producing the required goods and services .
14 It is clear from Fig. 18.9 and from other similar work that the instability can give rise to well-developed ring-shaped vortices while it is still in the periodic stage .
15 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 ) .
16 A multiple transfer of assets may be time consuming if consents are required and may give rise to unnecessary stamp duty .
17 But they did not give rise to new grouping systems within or between schools .
18 It is to be hoped that in the course of time the word ‘ fear ’ used in the context of the foregoing will be abandoned in favour of the word ‘ foreboding ’ , for the conscience , once properly developed should give warning rather than frighten , and therefore enable the individual to avoid that which could give rise to real fear .
19 Most of the expenditure was outside the dollar area , and did not give rise to immediate dollar payments .
20 If a hotel receptionist double-books a room does this give rise to criminal liability ?
21 For example , members might claim to be disadvantaged in an open hearing in putting forward a defence that could give rise to legal action for defamation or breach of confidence .
22 But it is at least possible to imagine circumstances in which a ruling or decision of the panel might give rise to legitimate complaint .
23 Cocaine addiction does not invariably give rise to physiological addiction and there may be no significant physical effects of withdrawal .
24 This decision has been taken in response to fears that the spur road would give rise to increased traffic flows in Duddingston Park South and the Niddrie/Bingham areas .
25 In order to promote these purposes the Secretary of State , normally on the advice of the Health and Safety Commission , has power to make ‘ health and safety regulations ’ which will give rise to civil liability except in so far as they provide otherwise .
26 It is far from clear , even using the Diplock test , which statutes will give rise to civil liability .
27 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 .
28 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 .
29 One possibility would be a statutory reformulation of Rylands v. Fletcher shorn of the qualifications and defences which so emasculate it now , perhaps on the lines of the Restatement , which imposes strict liability on one who carries on an ‘ abnormally dangerous activity , ’ but this would be open to varying judicial inclinations and would give rise to considerable uncertainty for a very long period of time .
30 In any case primaries could well give rise to organized campaigning , too expensive to be envisaged by all but the well-heeled .
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