Example sentences of "which give [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | There are readings throughout the Christian Bible which give help to people who are tense , lonely , bereaved , concerned for others or have a weakness in faith and about hundreds of other things and from these readings many people begin to see a way out of their problem . |
2 | Books which give rules of punctuation will tell you that this is a mistake . |
3 | We can not leave this section on New Towns and town development without reference to green belts , which give shape to redistribution policies and concepts of ‘ containing ’ urban Britain . |
4 | It is the former , ‘ objective relations ’ , which give shape to both the habitus and the fields . |
5 | It 's these lectures which finally unbalance Bob Roberts , which shifts from crisp satire to stodgy tract under the sheer density of Robbins ’ disgust with US politics , losing along the way the warped rock ‘ n ’ roll and documentary trappings which give bite to the first film intelligent enough to see assassination as a career move for the victim . |
6 | Instead , people are developing other problems are developing other problems such as cancers which give rise to the need for long-term community support . |
7 | The most common group caused by these abnormalities are disorders of the central nervous system , which give rise to anencephalus , hydrocephalus , and spina bifida ; these affect one child in five hundred , and may be almost immediately fatal or treated to avoid severe mental handicap . |
8 | They are not foolproof ; they carry additional risks to the health of the child ; and are capable of detecting only certain types of handicap , at present mainly chromosomal disorders and malformations of the central nervous system which give rise to spina bifida ( now largely a physical rather than mental handicap ) and hydrocephalus . |
9 | 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 . |
10 | Regions differ in social , industrial and cultural ways which give rise to different patterns of specific disease . |
11 | 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 . |
12 | Let us suppose that it was somehow possible to banish the feelings which give rise to such ugly behaviour in human beings . |
13 | It is these odours which give rise to problems , being technically difficult to control at such low levels . |
14 | Having obtained an exact solution in region IV , the question now is to find the initial conditions which give rise to it . |
15 | It is concerned with all types of conflict , many of which give rise to overt violence , but always in terms of the wider context within which such conflicts occur . |
16 | Green sets out the climatic conditions which give rise to the different degrees of ‘ air ’ . |
17 | For the cells which give rise to the lymphoma are white blood cells that secrete antibodies , and an antibody secreting cell normally rearranges the chromosomes that contain the antibody genes during its differentiation . |
18 | As we shall see in the next chapter , there are those who believe that management have often adopted forms of work organisation which give rise to unsatisfying jobs because it is cheaper for them so to do . |
19 | Atchley ( 1976 ) proposed that retired individuals have a ‘ hierarchy of goals ’ which give rise to their expectations , their behaviour and their sense of well-being . |
20 | Vulnerable frail elderly people , usually the very old , are the group which give rise to most concern amongst carers , professional or personal . |
21 | 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 . |
22 | The intuitive ordering will be in a state of perpetual disruption because of the pressures which give rise to varying likes and dislikes . |
23 | One alternative is to distinguish the constitution of individuals as intentional subjects who reason , choose and decide , from their constitution as capitalists , workers or lumpenproletariat , and to argue that it is the particular roles of a society which give rise to the need for legitimation . |
24 | ‘ Practical ’ determinism and ‘ practical ’ indeterminism thus converge in allowing that circumstances can be specified which give rise to varying levels of probability of crime occurring . |
25 | To me it seems that beauty , and indeed the qualities and forms which give rise to beauty , only exist for a consciousness . |
26 | Our discussion in the last two chapters and this one reveals three broad types of transaction which give rise to the demand and supply of currencies : |
27 | That is to say , characteristics of places , which give rise to the equilibrating tendencies of neo-classical theory or the reinforcing tendencies of cumulative causation , or which propel capital 's restless search for profit described by Marxism , are characteristics produced by society itself ; indeed they are products of the very industrial system which subsequently reacts to them . |
28 | The different schools would characterize that turning-point , and the mechanisms which give rise to it , in different ways , however . |
29 | The legislature creates a rather abstract mandate and an agency to implement it , while only defining explicitly the offences which give rise to prosecution . |
30 | 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 . |