Example sentences of "[pron] gives [noun sg] to [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Perhaps it can be done by saying that there is a basic biological species-need for sexual reproduction which gives rise to inner impulses , felt periodically , for full genital contact and orgasm .
2 It is the feeling of helplessness which gives rise to religious ideas and practices which in turn offer comfort and some protection , partly by giving men confidence .
3 If that seedcorn is confiscated , it inevitably drives companies into the hands of their bankers , which gives rise to many of the problems that small businesses are currently experiencing .
4 Interestingly , the largest structure in this formulation is not the exchange or transaction of the Birmingham School analyses , but a claim by one speaker which gives rise to fixed possibilities for moves of support or counter claim , in patterns referred to as context spaces .
5 These were the three crucial elements which gives rise to this central question in all discussions really of the Chinese revolution which is was this Marxism ?
6 Judging by the experience of former returning nurses it is the professed loss of practical and handling skills which gives rise to most worry .
7 The ideology which gives substance to this culture is based on a twin belief in the uniqueness of the magisterial role itself , and also the uniqueness of each individual case .
8 Companies that produce enough products to need in-house testing facilities can join a Verification Membership class which gives access to all of X/Open 's existing and emerging test soft ware .
9 For all these writers the key which gives access to this experience is understanding the essentially dynamic implications of the Incarnation .
10 We will maintain the Assisted Places scheme , which gives access to independent education to many families who could otherwise not afford it .
11 In arguing against the notion that the family is the origin of society , Marx and Engels reverse what they had argued in their previous writing , but Maine 's version of the argument , which gives priority to private property , is even more opposed to their general position , and so it is not surprising that they reject Maine in favour of Morgan .
12 A new procedure ( Land Registration ( Official Searches ) Rules 1988 ) provides for a search against a pending first registration , which gives priority to prospective buyers and chargees , and enables them to ascertain what other applications may be pending .
13 The Department of the Environment issued a circular in 1974 , Housing for People who are Physically Handicapped , which gives guidance to local authorities on how to assess the need for special housing and advice on provision over such things as design and siting .
14 He gives money to local charities .
15 However , it remains an open question whether the dust continues beyond about 100 metres , becoming fully compacted rock at 10 to 20 km , or whether it gives way to broken rock somewhere not far beyond 100 metres depth .
16 It gives rise to many of man 's anxieties and failures as well as to his often extraordinary achievements ’ ( pp. x , xi ) .
17 It is important to see in this last point a clear distinction between the term ‘ source of an instinct ’ , which would be studied by physical scientists , and the Freudian concept of instinct , which is one belonging more to mental life , for it gives rise to inner stimuli in the experience of a person .
18 Throughout the book , Petrey argues that Austin 's work is of huge importance and that it gives rise to significant insights when applied to the study of literature .
19 It gives access to all sorts of information , whether locally provided , or by remote access to systems all over the world .
20 It gives access to several farms beyond this one .
21 The major attraction of a fully-fledged GIS is that it gives access to large volumes of cartographic and attribute data which can be manipulated according to the needs of the user and the flexibility of the system software .
22 If so , what gives rise to such attitudes ?
23 Even if the early 1980s mark the trough of the latest Kondratiev cycle we have little idea of what is happening to the UK economy unless we can explain what gives rise to these long waves , Long-wave theorists rely upon fluctuations in innovation by firms for most of their explanatory power .
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