Example sentences of "rise to [art] " in BNC.

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1 On each side the inhabited coastal strip rises steeply from the water 's edge ; rises to the two volcanic peaks of Pachamama and Pachatata .
2 The waste gas is expelled when the fish next rises to the surface .
3 ‘ I 'll suck your dick and I wo n't stop/Till everything inside rises to the top I 'll swallow every ounce of that sticky cum/Cause that 's how a dick-suck should be done/Then your cum goes down my throat/And I 'm loving every bit and refuse to choke/No other girls will do the things I do/Now tell me/Is the pussy still good to you ? ’
4 Collor 's proposed constitutional reforms were widely interpreted as entailing a diminution of the powers of the Congress , which in late July had inflicted on him his worst legislative defeat , rejecting by 329 votes to 111 his " provisional measure " ( medida provisória ) granting pay rises to the armed forces and " unconstitutional " selective and differentiated increases for public servants .
5 Above all , the flight of Rudolf Hess to Scotland gave rise to every conceivable kind of speculation — so much so that one report in Bavaria dubbed May 1941 ‘ the month of rumours ’ , as tales surfaced everywhere about the disloyalty , corruption , theft on a grand scale , and flight abroad of Reich notables such as Himmler and Ley and various Bavarian Party bosses , among them Gauleiter Adolf Wagner , said to have been caught trying to get across the Swiss border with 22 million Reichmarks he had stolen from the confiscated property of dissolved monasteries .
6 His wrong-headedness resided in his failure to recognize that the attitudes and expenditures of which he made so much fun were merely symbols of achievement , the kind of achievement which has in fact given rise to every civilization and marked stages in the development of each one .
7 While the inclination may vary from a modest rise to a mountainside , there are a few golden rules you can follow .
8 The model used to allocate traffic between competing services is , however , very sensitive to relative prices , so , one would expect increases in Eurotunnel 's costs to give rise to a lower market share and hence to lower revenues .
9 In all societies , from the most primitive to the most advanced , envy and its counterpart , the fear of being envied , give rise to a whole series of often elaborate systems of behaviour .
10 Similarly , the self-evident fact that ‘ the racist creates his inferior ’ gives rise to a complex history , and the complex , ambivalent , conflicted identity of the subordinated ( Black Skin , 83 ) .
11 With 500 share sorters working round the clock , however , small investors could see their allocation rise to a ceiling of nearly 50 per cent if the issue is 2.25 times oversubscribed .
12 With 500 share sorters working round the clock , however , small investors could see their allocation rise to a ceiling of nearly 50 per cent if the issue is 2.25 times oversubscribed .
13 The computer did not plan an Agnes or a Paul , but only a prototype known as a human being , giving rise to a large number of specimens which are based on the original model and have n't any individual essence .
14 The stillness , the cool , the quiet of the building all combined to produce an effect that was overwhelming and gave rise to a feeling of expectation .
15 Indeed , this sort of campaigning has given rise to a certain newspaper image — that Mr Kinnock is being protected from real people , shepherded into a succession of carefully-staged photo-opportunities designed to look good on television but a million miles away from the real cut and thrust of the hustings .
16 By the looks of Sherwood 's 36 p.c. rise to a record pre-tax profit of £14½m in 1991 , the past was not bad either .
17 A desire for more effective drugs with fewer side effects , combined with an increasing knowledge of the molecular basis of treatment , has given rise to a clutch of new companies developing ‘ handed ’ molecules .
18 Mr Smith said he feared that opt-out schools could give rise to a two-tier education system .
19 The book just mentioned also gave rise to a rumour that Richard Baxter was about to conform .
20 The UK accounted for the largest downward revision for GDP in 1991 , from a 0.5 per cent rise to a 2 per cent fall , noted Freeman .
21 Responses to these questions will be varied , and each will give rise to a number of subsidiary questions .
22 Exposure to the Atlantic on the west gives rise to a cool , moist climate that is characterised by periods of powerful winds .
23 Erosion of the granites gives rise to a barren , rolling landscape such as is seen in the Uig Hills of western Lewis , and steep , inaccessible sea cliffs such as are present in western Harris .
24 The need for a saturated atmosphere may give rise to a particular abundance of these Atlantic bryophytes on NE- and E-facing slopes ( Ratcliffe 1968 ) , as noted above for Herbertus aduncus .
25 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 .
26 Most of these heteromorphs were derived from ‘ normal ’ ammonoids , but there is one famous example where an uncoiled form actually gave rise to a conventional-looking ammonoid by coiling up again !
27 The resulting bloom would then allow abnormally high numbers of planktonic starfish larvae to survive ; which in turn would give rise to a huge population of predatory adults .
28 The ‘ spiritual sense ’ view of faith has given rise to a form of spiritual elitism in which the believer welcomes a position in which he or she has no common ground with the unbeliever , and thereby turns the sort of dismissive ‘ religious language is nonsense ’ approach of Ayer into a welcome acceptance of the divide between men and women of reason on the one hand , and those with faith on the other .
29 Descartes , René ( 1596–1650 ) A philosopher of such significance as to give rise to a school of thought in his name , Cartesianism .
30 On the happening of any event likely to give rise to a claim under this section the Insured Person shall : —
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