Example sentences of "[vb base] rise to a [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The death of a member of the armed forces of the Crown as these are defined for purposes of the tax while active service or other service of a warlike nature does no give rise to a transfer of value .
2 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 .
3 These older cells undergo a second migration and give rise to a variety of cell types quite alien to the site at which they had arrived in their first migration , suggesting that there is a mixed population of cells at each site at the end of migration and the conditions at each site favour the growth and differentiation of specific members of the mixed population ; the others fail to flourish and presumably die .
4 These cells migrate ventrally and are dispersed throughout much of the body where they give rise to a variety of different tissue types , such as melanocytes and elements of the peripheral sensory and autonomic nervous system .
5 The nub of this criticism is that such views give rise to a kind of political paralysis : everything must wait until the revolutionary moment in which the production relations are transformed ; until then labour must play a purely oppositional role , a role which Precludes struggle of a ‘ prefigurative ’ kind .
6 To start with the first problem : How can a relatively simple and compact theory give rise to a universe that is as complex as the one we observe , with all its trivial and unimportant details ?
7 Because the trust is a foreign trust and the original sources of the income are foreign the payments give rise to a Case V , Schedule D source .
8 In particular it will investigate what individual and area characteristics give rise to a person having a high probability of being a victim of crime not just once , but repeatedly .
9 Just as variations in the physical and mineralogical properties of bedrock can influence the mineralogical products of weathering so different lithologies give rise to a range of weathering forms .
10 When employees receive benefits from the trust , these are unarguably acquired by virtue of employment and give rise to a Schedule E income tax charge , unless they are granted options structured so as to avoid a Schedule E charge on grant ( see s135 Taxes Act ) .
11 C.6 The Vendor wishes to control any actions which give rise to a breach of warranty .
12 Together , consumers and producers would come to arrangements which , in their consequences , give rise to a market in broadcasting .
13 Ambiguity remains because most word positions give rise to a number of alternative candidate words .
14 The details of the theory give rise to a number of testable predictions which are the basis of five interrelated experimental studies .
15 Localized zones of compressional and tensional stress are common along strike-slip faults and they give rise to a number of distinctive landforms .
16 And er this clash might be , give rise to a safety aspect .
17 Flat crystals give rise to a population of flat crystals .
18 Chunky crystals give rise to a population of chunky crystals .
19 In short , for many employees constructive dismissal claims give rise to a Catch 22 .
20 The legislative provisions on purchase of own shares ( Chapter VII Companies Act 1985 ) give rise to a need for independent valuations .
21 It follows that fear of impending death felt by the victim of a fatal injury before that injury is inflicted can not by itself give rise to a cause of action which survives for the benefit of the victim 's estate .
22 dissenting ) that a breach of article 30 would not of itself give rise to a claim in damages by the injured party .
23 It is coercive and not mere idle abuse and demands either action or abstention from action on the part of the recipient , so a mere announcement by A that he proposes to strike B is not , for the purposes of the law , a ‘ threat ’ and can not of itself give rise to a claim for damages .
24 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 .
25 The Official Solicitor is available to give advice to guardians ad litem involved in High Court proceedings and may be asked by the court to instruct counsel to appear as amicus curiae in any proceedings under the Act which give rise to an issue of general public importance .
26 Of such undertakings all that can be predicated is that some breaches will and others will not , give rise to an event which will deprive the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract ; and the legal consequences of a breach of such an undertaking , unless provided for expressly in the contract , depend upon the nature of the event to which the breach gives rise and do not follow automatically from a prior classification of the undertaking as a " condition " or a " warranty " .
27 As a general rule stimuli which are heard within , or from part of a linguistic context give rise to an advantage for the right ear whereas stimuli heard within a non-linguistic context are more likely to show a superiority favouring the left ear .
28 In further discussion , it was suggested that , even though opinion was divided on the merits and on the question whether the abolition of the death penalty would in normal circumstances give rise to an increase in the number of murders , the Cabinet might be able to agree that this was not an appropriate moment at which to take the risk of abolishing the death penalty .
  Next page