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

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1 As ‘ Lilla ’ has been kept in the South of England for many years its trip to Bala gives Northern fans of these locos a chance to see this one of two in British preservation .
2 Its high ratio of carbon to hydrogen gives less heat and more carbon dioxide than oil and gas ; it burns well only in large elaborate furnaces ; it produces ash and sulphur dioxide .
3 Resolving the gravitational force due to the star tangential to OA gives zero for A , while for B the force has a component towards A. Therefore there is a relative acceleration between A and B given by which is independent of the masses of A and B. Such an acceleration is called a differential or tidal acceleration ; it is unaffected by the choice of reference frame .
4 Guide to Kulchur gives us Pound at his most personal , at his most deliberately vulnerable ; it is here that we find him wondering aloud , for instance , if the body of his work to that date could be mentioned in the same breath with Thomas Hardy 's .
5 Differentiating this last expression with respect to s gives .
6 " Leading from start to finish gives it more credibility .
7 Extrapolation to Lothian gives an estimate of 250 children born to 63 parents infected with HIV through injecting drug use .
8 A fly on the dressing room wall suggests Alex Miller was furious with his players ' performance but the trip to Glasgow gives them a chance to atone .
9 ‘ Progress to date gives a high degree of confidence of success , ’ says Wright .
10 The level of tuition fees charged to students gives them the right to expect a professional standard of service , particularly with regard to test-marking ; the Education Service is judged , to a considerable extent , by that criterion .
11 Here the degenerate ‘ Sub-mycenaean ’ style common to Greece gives place to what we call Protogeometric .
12 Substitution of the to infinitive gives a somewhat different impression : the events seem to be evoked in a much more resultative fashion — as the fact of having been made to scream , the state of Byron 's feelings — that is , as an object of reflection rather than a recall of actual experience .
13 ( 5.19 ) with respect to time gives the variation of rotor position with time : For a phase current the flux linked with phase A is simply the product of current and inductance : and the rate of change of flux linkages with time is : The first term in this expression is the voltage induced in the phase windings by the rotor motion and the second term arises from the changing current in the phase inductance — Substituting from Eqns — ( 5.17 ) and ( 5.20 ) gives the motional voltage in terms of the phase inductance : Since the phase current , is produced by a switched voltage supply it is non-sinusoidal and therefore , from Eqn .
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