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

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1 It was inconvenient ; the prospects for private accumulation in the future was slimmer ; the expectation that public enterprise would be less responsive to needs than free traders gave rise to fears of a general decline in wealth and amenity ,
2 Sorry , I think it 's worth noting some of the circumstances giving rise to Mrs Brown er committing the offences which bring her before the court today .
3 Their spring offensive in Negros Occidental province — " Operation Thunderbolt " — cleared the NPA from an area which they had long regarded as their own , but with heavy civilian casualties giving rise to criticism of their action from the Catholic Church and human rights groups .
4 Not just the elements gave rise to life
5 Other lines gave rise to forms in which the shells were loosely coiled or almost straight .
6 The difference of treatment for the two bids gave rise to criticism that the government 's merger policy favoured conglomerates .
7 Plans give rise to actions ( performance ) , and actions have to be monitored to ensure that they reflect the aims and intentions of the plans .
8 In broad and generalised terms , visual defects give rise to loss of clear vision , loss of central vision , or loss of peripheral vision , the visual field may be reduced or interrupted .
9 L.F. COSTERTIUM , FECIT ’ ( Marcus Agrippa , Son of Lucius , consul for the third time , built this ) — for many years gave rise to misconceptions regarding the period of building of the Pantheon .
10 The great majority of mechanical problems give rise to matrices having distinct eigenvalues ; however , problems involving equal eigenvalues are by no means unknown .
11 This is the scheme according to which material conditions give rise to class relations which at first develop in direct response to these material conditions .
12 These provisions gave rise to uncertainty largely because the courts showed a marked reluctance to interpret them according to the ordinary meaning of such words as ‘ void , and they also gave rise to injustice because under the Common Law an infant could still sue an adult upon a contract unenforceable against himself and incapable of ratification by him .
13 The initial low volume of stock option deals gave rise to doubts as to whether demand existed in the UK for a traded options market .
14 The process is in general ( but not in detail ) analogous to the Brownian motion of molecules giving rise to fluid viscosity .
15 These eruptions give rise to rocks known as ignimbrites , and they are so powerful that tens of cubic kilometres of ignimbrite can be erupted in nuee ardente-like incandescent clouds in the space of a few hours or days .
16 The most common kinds of situations giving rise to interaction amongst Network members are summarised below , together with a checklist which sets out the obligations of the initiating member and the participating member in each set of circumstances .
17 By the early 1980s problems for some Central and South American countries in meeting interest and principal repayments on outstanding loans gave rise to fears of an international debt crisis .
18 In other words , did the religious belief stimulate the precise astronomical observation , or was it that the study of the skies gave rise to beliefs about the gods ?
19 Furthermore , the processes giving rise to pollution sometimes produce erratic discharges in which effluents may become heavily polluting , and riverwater is also inherently variable in quality .
20 In CH 3 X , the a 1 modes give rise to dipole changes parallel to the C-X axis , and the e modes give rise to dipole changes perpendicular to that axis .
21 In CH 3 X , the a 1 modes give rise to dipole changes parallel to the C-X axis , and the e modes give rise to dipole changes perpendicular to that axis .
22 Marshal Pétain has traced in our history pages some of which remain luminous while others give rise to interpretations that still conflict and arouse lively passions .
23 These deficiencies give rise to dissatisfaction in those who can see increasing inequalities in a society where suburbanites and those in the smaller towns and cities of the south of England have experienced large material gains through house-price increases and tax changes .
24 For a combination all three components exist , though only a 1 and e components give rise to IR transitions from the ground state .
25 Many situations can not be handled on the basis of ‘ A per cent of records give rise to B per cent of accesses ’ .
26 In earlier examples , the boy trying to solve a design problem and the girl trying to spell a particular sound , the children turned to others for support because their tasks gave rise to questions which needed talking through .
27 But it has to be reiterated that the CTP does not explain these observations : it does not explain how the impinging events give rise to awareness of those events .
28 For the purposes of this judgment it is sufficient to record that the official receiver asked the appellant a number of questions bearing upon the events giving rise to counts 1 , 2 and 4 , most particularly counts 1 and 2 , and elicited from the appellant , albeit reluctantly , answers which were incriminating .
29 By a notice of appeal dated 1 March 1991 the defendant appealed on the grounds , inter alia , ( 1 ) that the donee of the power of appointment , the defendant 's mother , Mrs. Mary Steed , did not know that she had been appointed attorney by the defendant and accordingly could not have known that she had any power to deal with his property when she executed the transfer of 4 September 1979 , and that in those circumstances the plea of non est factum ought to have succeeded on the judge 's finding that the donee was tricked into signing the transfer ; ( 2 ) the judge having rightly concluded that the transaction as affected was not a sale , save possibly at such a gross undervalue as to vitiate it as a sale , should therefore have held that the transfer was void and ineffective ; ( 3 ) the judge having rightly concluded that he retained a discretion to rectify the charges register against the registered holder , notwithstanding , as he found , that ( i ) the title of the mortgagors , Mr. and Mrs. Hammond , was merely voidable and not void , and ( ii ) that the registered holders of the charge were bona fide mortgagees for value without notice of the facts giving rise to voidability , then wrongly exercised his discretion to refuse to rectify since the considerations in favour of rectification could hardly have been stronger and his refusal to exercise his discretion was tantamount to denying the effective existence of such discretion , as if it was not exercised on the facts of this case it could never , or virtually never , be exercised at all ; and that , in the premises , the judge had erred in law in placing excessive reliance upon ( i ) and ( ii ) above to the exclusion of the other considerations which favoured rectification .
30 Article 85(1) does not apply to total or partial concentrations as such unless they contain clauses giving rise to restrictions on competition .
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