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

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1 Might n't it merely give rise to a new , psychologistic , feminist reductionism ?
2 The income arising to the trust can only be taxed under Schedule D , Case IV or V. Payments from the trust can only give rise to a new source under Case V. Those Cases give the taxpayer the benefit of the remittance basis .
3 There must have been an increase in the number of different kinds of animals and plants since the Precambrian ; for example , the conquering of land alone gave rise to a multitude of new opportunities for the colonizing organisms , resulting in an increase in the total number of species .
4 There would have been no defence ( just as in Reg. v. Lawrence ) if the charge had been laid under section 15(1) and , as in Reg. v. Lawrence and the present case , it was the Crown 's resort to section 1(1) which alone gave rise to a legal problem .
5 Exercise stimulates blood flow to the skin and so gives rise to a healthy appearance .
6 These changes may last many hours , and thermal stimulation especially gives rise to a particularly complex and longlasting expression of the gene .
7 These modes can thus give rise to an Ikeda instability ( which will now have a period rather than 2tR ) provided these modes are resolved into two gain peaks : a high-finesse resonator is thus required for this version of the Ikeda instability , which gives rise to chaos via a period-doubling cascade in parameter regions corresponding to the upper branch of optical bistability { 23 } .
8 Corporation tax that is repaid as a result of a carry back of ACT will not generally give rise to a repayment supplement .
9 For example , if UK exports or capital inflows into the UK are paid for in sterling , then foreigners have to purchase pounds in foreign currency markets with their own currencies , thus giving rise to a demand for pounds .
10 If trustees make a payment of monies to a beneficiary this may comprise income in the hands of the beneficiary thus giving rise to a tax charge .
11 The negative sign involves a perturbation to 5 which reverses each tR , and thus gives rise to an oscillation with period 2tR .
12 The insurance is only intended to cover vendors who at the time of contract had no knowledge of circumstances which eventually give rise to a claim or of the likelihood of claims being made under the warranties .
13 Despite his wonderfully unattractive and humourless appearance , his exotic origins nonetheless gave rise to an extraordinary rumour .
14 Robbins also related to the upskilling debate — the expansion of education and the high birth rate of the immediate post-war period , for example , had given rise to a shortage of qualified teachers especially in primary schools , and changes in the numbers of white-collar jobs available to women had also given rise to a demand for better qualified and certificated female labour .
15 They would also give rise to a smaller Schwarzschild mass parameter , and hence greater curvature on the horizon .
16 Section 743(5) states that in any case where an individual has for the purposes of s739 power to enjoy income of a person abroad by reason of his receiving a benefit from the trust ( hence giving rise to a tax charge under TA 1988 , s742(2) ( c ) ) , the individual shall be chargeable to income tax under s739 for the year of assessment in which the benefit is received .
17 A word describing a " concrete " object also gives rise to a " pictorial " trace but an " abstract " word establishes only a verbal trace .
18 The book just mentioned also gave rise to a rumour that Richard Baxter was about to conform .
19 This approach also gave rise to a change in attitudes about the split between the academic and non-academic functions within the Colleges , which encouraged the Principals to make more flexible use of resources .
20 This report , which culminated in the 1967 Sexual Offences Act , also gave rise to a two-part ‘ Man Alive ’ feature called ‘ Consenting Adults ’ ( BBC ) , which dealt in separate weeks with men and women .
21 Durkheim said that simple societies were held together by ‘ mechanical solidarity through likeness ’ : people were united by the similarity in the labour and the general social roles they performed , which also gave rise to a homogeneous conscience collective .
22 The proximity of such natural beauty to a thriving merchant city also gave rise to a native school of Bristol artists initially closely related to the Romantic poets .
23 The undetermined category includes those deaths referred to by Bray , thereby giving rise to an underestimate of the number of deaths attributed to suicide , but the total number of deaths is unaffected .
24 This correspondingly gave rise to a hole in the planned running length of the second season and was discussed at Department head level some months later .
25 The change in a , may well give rise to a change in savings behaviour ( savings being influenced by the degree of regression to the mean ) , and this may modify the conclusions .
26 A late application may well give rise to an adjournment , for an Order for leave to file an amended pleading in response , for further particulars , and for discovery arising from the amendment .
27 Such signals of transcendence can often consciously give rise to an awareness of the need to use a different kind of vocabulary .
28 The Government could scarcely have been more out of touch with the people at large , and was still , in any case , terrified that Jacobinism might even then give rise to a revolution at any moment .
29 The three equivalent M-H bonds of and MH 3 group in a molecule with a 3-fold axis through M then give rise to a symmetric combination of all three stretching motions ( symmetry species a , ) and a degenerate pair of antisymmetric combinations of stretching motions , with symmetry species e [ see Fig. 5.20(b) ] .
30 The desirability of ‘ tying up ’ a settlement in one parcel sometimes give rise to a problem for the parliamentary agent in drafting the legislation , the question being whether to put in a protective clause at the outset , or to omit it and negotiate a settlement of such a clause for insertion at a later stage .
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