Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] rise to the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Within the past few years there have been developments that give rise to the hope that before too long we shall have a filly consistent quantum theory of gravity , one that will agree with general relativity for macroscopic objects and will , one hopes , be free of the mathematical infinities that have long bedeviled other quantum field theories .
2 Although the global hypsometric curve provides a valuable statistical summary of the Earth 's relief as a whole it is also necessary to identify the major components of global morphology that give rise to the curve ( Fig. 2.4 ) .
3 They differ from causal circumstance and effect in that they lack either or both of the features that give rise to the difference between causal circumstance and effect-the priority of the causal circumstance .
4 But there are plenty of social , psychological and religious theories that give rise to the suspicion that , in their concern to explain everything , they explain nothing .
5 The General Medical Council recognises the importance complainants place on rectification and that complaints systems should be able to rectify the circumstances that gave rise to the problem .
6 In addition Lewis argues that since the name " hashishi " is local to Syria as a term of popular abuse , it was " in all probability the name that gave rise to the story , rather than the reverse " .
7 Indeed , traditional archivists devote much time and resources to providing users with a description of the administrative framework that gave rise to the generation of a particular record or class of records .
8 We have already mentioned one of the factors that gave rise to the emergence of accountability as a central issue in education : the need to justify increased spending in the 1960s .
9 One hundred and fifty-five years on from Darwin 's marital dilemma , the major pre-occupation that gave rise to the organization of the conference to which this paper is submitted , is a marriage of a different sort : the study of history and the use of information technology .
10 When such ‘ table carp ’ entered the genetic pool of Japanese Koi , it was these reflective scales , usually either side of the dorsal fin , that gave rise to the term ‘ Doitsu ’ — a corruption of the word ‘ Deutsch ’ , meaning ‘ German ’ .
11 We have seen that the visual areas of the prestriate cortex recode image properties into properties of the object that gave rise to the image .
12 The main outstanding issue in perception , including visual perception , concerns the processes that combine information about the attributes of a particular scene into a representation of the object that gave rise to the image , sound or pattern of touch .
13 Foucault , of course , acknowledged that the reformative ideals that gave rise to the prison were a failure , in practice , from the start .
14 It was this provision that gave rise to the loophole sought to be exploited by B.C.C.I. depositors .
15 Similarly the companion should have no tax liability as it is presumably the disposal of an interest in his/her main residence that gives rise to the receipt of £34,000 .
16 The central problem with which holism has to deal — the problem that gives rise to the holist view I shall now examine — can be very simply expressed .
17 Language in its significant sense is that vocal gesture which tends to arouse in the individual the attitude which it arouses in others , and it is this perfecting of the self by the gesture which mediates the social activities that gives rise to the process of taking the role of the other .
18 The feature of human culture and human activities that gives rise to the representation problem is above all that human communities embody norms , and it is this notion that I shall principally discuss .
19 2.2 Section 1(2) ( c ) of the 1934 Act expressly stated before amendment that where the act or omission that gives rise to the cause of action results in death the damages are to be calculated without reference to any loss or gain to the deceased 's estate consequent on his death , except that a sum in respect of funeral expenses may be included .
20 Others have suggested that there were paired nasal sacs opening separately and gave rise to the theory that heterostracans might be ancestral to jawed vertebrates ( Fig. 2 B , b ) .
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