Example sentences of "[coord] [noun] give rise [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Just as essences or forms give rise to those properties , so definitions of those forms , when used as premisses , give rise to conclusions about those properties .
2 The questions which arise in aircraft accident investigation usually relate to the boundaries of radio technology — things such as trying to establish the radio propagation conditions in which some phenomenon or other gives rise to a kink in an instrument landing system localiser or glide slope but only on an intermittent basis , or the reliability of a radio altimeter in an auto-land system during an approach over surfaces with greatly differing radio reflecting characteristics .
3 The issue was ‘ the date of the act , neglect or default giving rise to the action ’ for the purposes of the applicable limitation statute .
4 ‘ No action of damages where the damages claimed consist of or include damages … in respect of personal injuries to any person shall be brought in Scotland against any person unless it is commenced … before the expiration of three years from the date of the act , neglect or default giving rise to the action …
5 … I am prepared to hold , therefore , that the ‘ act , neglect or default giving rise to the action ’ was the doing of damage to the plaintiff by the negligence of the defendants : and inasmuch as the action was commenced within three years from the date when the damage was done , it is not barred by the statute .
6 or , ( 1 ) a claim which by virtue of any other enactment the court has power to hear and determine notwithstanding that the person against whom the claim is made is not within England and Wales or that the wrongful act , neglect or default giving rise to the claim did not take place within England and Wales .
7 A local authority , once satisfied that an odour amounts to a statutory nuisance is under a duty to serve an abatement notice in accordance with s.93 of the Public Health Act 1936 on the person whose act , default or sufferance gave rise to the nuisance or caused it to continue , requiring that person , in a specified time , usually two to six months , to abate the nuisance and to execute such remedial works and take such steps as may be necessary for that purpose .
8 Negative Richardson number corresponds to a destabilizing density gradient ; both shear and buoyancy give rise to turbulence generation .
9 Nearly two thousand years have elapsed since Cicero proclaimed the virtues of legal harmonization : The urge towards internal harmonization of local laws and customs gave rise to the common law in England and to codification in Europe .
10 A series of Acts of Parliament concerned with employment , labour relations , discrimination , health and safety gave rise to the need for substantial developments in the recording of payroll and personnel information .
11 Magma formation is thus confined to the hydrated mantle wedge above the subducting slab , where residues of mainly olivine and pyroxene give rise to calc-alkaline magmas with higher Yb contents and lower La/Yb ratios than in the high-Al TTD suites .
12 More commonly , larval numbers increase on pasture in summer and autumn giving rise to clinical problems during these seasons .
13 The act of borrowing and lending gives rise to financial claims ; the holders ( savers ) of assets and suppliers ( borrowers ) of claims create a financial market in some form .
14 As to the performance , the increasing quantity of ‘ voices only ’ work by the Hilliard Ensemble and others gives rise to several questions about the performance style and vocal colour which these groups consciously or not have adopted .
15 The statue and sundial give rise in my judgment to no difficulty .
16 Between 1336 and 1341 the burden of taxation was unprecedentedly heavy , and the oppressive conduct of the royal officials appointed to levy taxes and prises gave rise to widespread complaints .
17 Three types of event are postulated : local gene duplications , which formed a cluster of related ZNF genes , A , B and C , after sequence divergence ; a locus duplication , whereby at least part of the cluster of ZNF genes was duplicated on one chromosome arm ( portrayed as genes B and C giving rise to their counterparts B' and C' ) ; and finally a pericentric inversion which separated the duplicated clusters , positioning them on opposite sides of the centromere .
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