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

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1 Yet if we are to be realistic in our starting-point we must accept that the relationships which give rise to nuclear catastrophe are likely to be relationships between sovereign states , each able to possess and deploy armed force for their own interests .
2 In an experiment , we can be sure that there are no third variables which give rise to both X and Y because the only way in which the randomized control groups are allowed to vary is in terms of X .
3 Aggregate data do not , of course , allow us to draw any inferences about the behaviour of individual authorities which give rise to these findings , particularly where so few cases are often involved .
4 Ltd v. Heller & Partners Ltd and Anns v. London Borough of Merton as the authorities which give rise to this proposition .
5 To me it seems that beauty , and indeed the qualities and forms which give rise to beauty , only exist for a consciousness .
6 There may be facts that are not known to the warrantors which give rise to that liability .
7 Instead , people are developing other problems are developing other problems such as cancers which give rise to the need for long-term community support .
8 Looking at episodes from the Middle East and Africa , this project will investigate the circumstances which give rise to such mass departures , examine their socio-economic dimensions , and consider the policy options available to deal with them .
9 It is worrying , therefore , that the NIRC in Hudson ( Birmingham ) Ltd v Winsper opined : ‘ If they [ the employers ] want to make it absolutely certain that no tribunal will dissent from their dismissing the driver who is convicted of dangerous driving , then they should , in fairness to themselves and the driver , post a notice or otherwise bring it to the attention of all their drivers that any conviction for dangerous driving , regardless of the circumstances which give rise to it , will lead to dismissal .
10 ( 4 ) In determining the value of an action under paragraph ( 1 ) ( a ) : ( a ) the sum which the plaintiff or applicant reasonably expects to recover shall be reduced by the amount of any debt which he admits that he owes to a defendant in that action and which arises from the circumstances which give rise to the action ; ( b ) no account shall be taken of a possible finding of contributory negligence , except to the extent , if any , that such negligence is admitted ; ( c ) where the plaintiff seeks an award of provisional damages as described in s 32A(2) ( a ) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 , no account shall be taken of the possibility of a future application for further damages ; ( d ) the value shall be taken to include sums which , by virtue of s 22 of the Social Security Act 1989 , are required to be paid to the Secretary of State .
11 The same result can also be achieved by excluding the circumstances which give rise to an implied term .
12 The legislature creates a rather abstract mandate and an agency to implement it , while only defining explicitly the offences which give rise to prosecution .
13 The next stage in this strategy for expressing the strains which give rise to hurt and resentment concerns a mutual agreement not to hurt , attack or retaliate .
14 The questions which give rise to debate are rarely those which later have to be decided by the courts .
15 Let us suppose that it was somehow possible to banish the feelings which give rise to such ugly behaviour in human beings .
16 It is not every failure to comply with law or every constitutional and non-constitutional short cut which adds up to an approach to powers which give rise to questions of legitimacy .
17 Having obtained an exact solution in region IV , the question now is to find the initial conditions which give rise to it .
18 Green sets out the climatic conditions which give rise to the different degrees of ‘ air ’ .
19 The research will analyse the changing structure of leadership and the conditions which give rise to political stability and instability .
20 C.6 The Vendor wishes to control any actions which give rise to a breach of warranty .
21 Regions differ in social , industrial and cultural ways which give rise to different patterns of specific disease .
22 In the remaining span of the project , it is hoped that further progress will be made in understanding the relationship between these properties and the modelling and estimation techniques which give rise to them .
23 The intuitive ordering will be in a state of perpetual disruption because of the pressures which give rise to varying likes and dislikes .
24 There are the same problems in estimating incidence , in defining the phenomena and in defining the characteristics of the abuser or the situations which give rise to abuse .
25 So if we adopt presuppositions which are too small to handle the range of reality we are facing , their rationality and coherence will be severely limited and any conceptions they give rise to may be equally confined and distorted .
26 In the meantime , he appealed to the republics to declare a moratorium " on decisions which give rise to arguments over the issue of competence " , complaining that the alternative was incurable paralysis .
27 Finally , it is also important for an officer to know about the processes which give rise to the particular effluents in his patch , since this helps the business of containment and on the spot diagnosis in an emergency .
28 It is these odours which give rise to problems , being technically difficult to control at such low levels .
29 It was assumed that projects exist either with easily specified cash flows or with easily specified underlying factors which give rise to those cash flows .
30 The research is designed to test these suppositions : on the one hand , by documenting the extent of street life in inner-city areas , its meaning and significance for those who participate in it , and its variation between social ( particularly ethnic ) groups ; and on the other , by analysing the factors which give rise to it , together with the nature of its contribution ( if any ) to riotous behaviour .
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