Example sentences of "that give [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Not only of its fastnesses and vastnesses but also of the minute detailing of existence upon our own planet : its climatic patterns and the plate tectonics that give rise to earthquakes , volcanoes , fold mountains and the oceanic ridges . |
2 | The eggs that give rise to them develop spontaneously , without being penetrated by a sperm . |
3 | New positional fields are established after the main axis is set up — those that give rise to the limbs will be examined in the next chapter . |
4 | It is now appropriate to consider the extension of the solution into the prior regions I , II and III which describe the approaching waves that give rise to this particular interaction . |
5 | Good examples of this are the genes that give rise to the histones ( proteins that make up the chromosomal superstructure ) , the ribosomal RNA , the immunoglobulins and many others . |
6 | Of course , if the migrating Alu sequences are to spread to succeeding generations of animals , this cycle must take place in the cells that give rise to the sperm or eggs . |
7 | The philosophy ( with the arguable exception of the Netherlands ) is not actually practised anywhere in the world , although the concerns that give rise to it have led to a continuing debate in some western industrialized democracies about ways in which the monopolistic nature of the capitalist press might be usefully modified . |
8 | In excessively crude shorthand : there are light-coloured rocks that form themselves into sharp peaks and very explosive volcanoes ( Mount St Helens , Krakatoa ) on the outside of the Line ; while there are dark-coloured rocks that give rise to rounded hills from which flow copious amounts of benign lavas ( Mauna Loa ) within it . |
9 | Although oligodendrocytes themselves normally do not divide , the precursor cells that give rise to them do . |
10 | They differ from causal circumstance and effect in that they lack either or both of the features that give rise to the difference between causal circumstance and effect-the priority of the causal circumstance . |
11 | ( v ) freedom from substances that give rise to foaming or unpleasant odours . |
12 | The removal of persistent residues that give rise to foaming or smells could be an expensive process because they may be from materials that have not been amenable to treatment . |
13 | Now , one of them will rotate to the right , one will rotate to the left what you need to be able to do is to identify the condition that will give that give rise to optical isomers , in other words , to be able to say yes , that molecule will have optical isomers . |
14 | But there are plenty of social , psychological and religious theories that give rise to the suspicion that , in their concern to explain everything , they explain nothing . |
15 | When A per cent of records that give rise to B per cent of accesses is loaded first , the improvement obtained tends to ( 100 — B ) / ( 100 — A ) as . |
16 | Within the past few years there have been developments that give rise to the hope that before too long we shall have a filly consistent quantum theory of gravity , one that will agree with general relativity for macroscopic objects and will , one hopes , be free of the mathematical infinities that have long bedeviled other quantum field theories . |
17 | The research aims to document the range of factors that give rise to arrears , as identified by the borrower . |
18 | Although the global hypsometric curve provides a valuable statistical summary of the Earth 's relief as a whole it is also necessary to identify the major components of global morphology that give rise to the curve ( Fig. 2.4 ) . |
19 | Some further examples of each kind , organized under the maxims that give rise to them , may help to make the distinction clear . |
20 | The development of a model that describes the balance of forces that give rise to a net free energy change per base pair stacking interaction in a DNA duplex ( formed from disordered single strands ) requires some method of partitioning the individual contributions . |
21 | Hence , molecular associations that give rise to large exothermicities are also associated with large adverse entropy changes , and the two effects work in a compensatory manner [ 6 ] . |
22 | What we 're finding is that the discoveries in interstellar space are making us try new experiments and erm try and reproduce these conditions , perhaps in the laboratory , and then go on to discover new molecules in space and understand the processes that give rise to the molecules . |
23 | The muscles that give expression to the face are also referred to as skeletal muscles , and they like bone to skin . |
24 | The muscles that give expression to the face are also referred to as skeletal muscles , and they like bone to skin . |
25 | I will quote some specific figures that give credibility to amendment No. 7 . |
26 | From the results of these experiments they appear to have receptors that give direction to their movement to search out the source of this sugar . |
27 | An elder 's purposes are not simply mental ideals or fantasies , but are working ideas that give direction to daily living . |
28 | Plasticisers are the molecules that give clinginess to clingfilm and make other plastic wrappers soft and flexible . |
29 | Yet at the moment there is a feeling in many of the schools I visit ( both in this country and abroad ) that to give attention to the child who is already a ‘ high flier ’ is difficult and somehow immoral . |
30 | In a stark and poignant phrase , he refers to God as the belly of the starving man and claims that to give food to such a man is to give a gift to God . |