Example sentences of "[adj] [adj] [noun sg] give rise [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Half the gametes will have two of each type and fertilisation of one of these with a normal haploid gamete gives rise to a zygote with a triploid number of chromosomes . |
2 | And first I want to discuss this idea of hopeful monsters , which is a phrase which goes back to Richard Goldsmith , the geneticist , who argued that occasionally a single — well he was vague about what kind of mutation he had in mind , because he had really rather odd ideas about what genes were and so on but he held occasionally that some genetic change gave rise in some sense in a single dialectical leap to organisms strikingly different from their parents and that speciation consisted of the establishment of such hopeful monsters or macro mutations . |
3 | The brave Belgian resistance gave rise to two further factors of the greatest importance . |
4 | This scale-related generalization gives rise to both locational errors and attribute uncertainty . |
5 | This last demand gave rise to speculation about the level of the involvement of the army leadership in the organization of the coup . |
6 | Later , when the crankshaft 's centrifuge covers were removed , great wedges of thick black tar-like oil gave rise to grave doubts as to the authenticity of the engine records which showed that only 81–1/2 hours were booked to this engine . |
7 | The social repercussions of Emancipation and accelerated economic development gave rise to a range of diverse pressures upon the regime . |
8 | That short answer gives rise to two further questions . |
9 | As an overseas discretionary trust gives rise to sources under Case IV or V ( see p21 ) it is clear that Case III is not applicable . |
10 | Whether this means that life originated just once , or that it originated many times , each origin acquiring a different code , but that one origin gave rise to more successful competitors , we do not know . |
11 | The existence in Scots of many phonolexical sets of the same general type gives rise on a rather large scale to similar methodological problems in sociolinguistic work in Scotland . |