Example sentences of "[pron] [noun sg] give rise [prep] " in BNC.

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1 How the negative-feedback loop can be designed to prevent its presence giving rise to instability will now be demonstrated in the context of operational amplifiers .
2 Being ethnically dissimilar to any of their neighbours , their origin gives rise to conflicting anthropological theories , but when the Toraja themselves are asked where they came from they reply : " Before the dawn of human memory our ancestors descended from the Pleiades in skyships . "
3 But their work gives rise to another problem .
4 The essential defining characteristic of this relation is its capacity to give rise to pleonasm .
5 No object can qualify as a possible ontological existent if its notion gives rise to a contradiction .
6 Solitude was an eccentricity the school was at pains to discourage , and its absence gave rise to a sort of panic in me which served to reinforce my sense of loss of self .
7 Not only would the creature regenerate severed scraps of its body into new limbs , not only would gobbets of its substance give rise to more of it , but in some fashion — through the medium of the warp — its substance could remain connected together , could still function as a unit even when slashed apart .
8 Their weathering gave rise to sandy and pebbly deposits .
9 PRE-EXISTING HEALTH CONDITIONS AND PREGNANCY — the only exclusions are in respect of any claim where at the time of taking out this Insurance ( i.e. making your booking ) the person whose condition gives rise to the claim ( whether the Insured , the travelling companion or other person not travelling ) is either : —
10 Taken along with his restrained reaction to the repression of the pro-democracy movement in China itself [ see pp. 36720-22 ] , his attitude gave rise to some suggestions that he saw a role for himself as a potential mediator in the Hong Kong issue .
11 His departure gave rise to widespread public rejoicing , as Panamanian citizens joined US troops in jubilant street celebrations .
12 A one year course of critical study of the ideas of Marx , and the movements his thought gave rise to .
13 The ontological idealist , given his general metaphysical premisses , can at least argue that what we regard as " physical bodies " are really no extra-spiritual entities , for all entities are either spiritual or are explicable in terms of attributes of such entities , and although his position gives rise to all kinds of difficulties , he can , on the whole , present his case a good deal more consistently than a dualist can .
14 Our philosophy gives rise to a number of laws .
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