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单词 Give rise to
例句
1. Unhygienic conditions give rise to disease.
2. So many things concurred to give rise to the problem.
3. Low levels of choline in the body can give rise to high blood-pressure.
4. Any lack of precision in the contract could give rise to a dispute.
5. This can give rise to some difficult problems.
6. External load torques, perhaps caused by friction, give rise to a small error in position when the motor is stationary.
7. Whether they give rise to more or to less planning blight than the old development plan system is debatable.
8. This could give rise to questions such as: How can shadows be made?
9. The nature of the underground drainage can give rise to international problems when streams cross under frontiers.
10. Yet each would give rise to a different organizational structure from any we are familiar with.
11. Failure to comply with that instruction might give rise to a charge of obstructing the police in addition to that of obstructing the highway.
12. In short, for many employees constructive dismissal claims give rise to a Catch 22.
13. A failure to carry out necessary work would give rise to liability.
14. Any number of circumstances may give rise to a fluctuation in workload thus upsetting staffing predictions.
15. However, it may give rise to the necessity for a fairly sophisticated mathematical calculation if a conversion table is not published.
16. This may give rise to dispute where terms are incorporated by reference to some other document, as in the examples above.
16. Wish you will love and make progress everyday!
17. Introduction Not all breaches of statutory duty will give rise to an action for damages by a person injured as a result.
18. The larva moults to give rise to the four-legged nymph, which, after five more days, becomes the adult mite.
19. To proceed without doing so would give rise to conflicts of interest which could impede the proper performance of his duties.
20. They would also give rise to a smaller Schwarzschild mass parameter, and hence greater curvature on the horizon.
21. They give rise to behavioural responses to external stimuli that are enduring and consistent within a person's psychological constitution.
22. The decrease in the number of bicycles and cars might give rise to another new set of problems.
23. The brief seizures described by During and Spencer would not, however, be expected to give rise to nerve cell death.
24. Some cells migrate beneath the future skin and will give rise to pigment cells.
25. The essential defining characteristic of this relation is its capacity to give rise to pleonasm.
26. It is also worth reiterating that traditional rape laws frequently give rise to light sentences for lesser offences.
27. If so, it is perhaps surprising that a threat of a mere breach of contract should give rise to liability.
28. The research aims to document the range of factors that give rise to arrears, as identified by the borrower.
29. If a hotel receptionist double-books a room does this give rise to criminal liability?
30. However within sample it is important to examine the implied elasticity to see whether the estimated coefficients give rise to plausible effects.
31. These progenitors subsequently give rise to at least nine distinct differentiated cell types.
32. Consider the hypothetical random disturbances shown in Fig. 11 which give rise to fairly realistic variations in real output.
33. Equipment should not be installed if it is likely to give rise to legionnaire's disease.
34. This can often give rise to dispute and requires careful thought.
35. But unfortunately, they can also give rise to unhealthy fears.
36. Although oligodendrocytes themselves normally do not divide, the precursor cells that give rise to them do.
37. What social and interpersonal practices do they give rise to?
38. Cocaine addiction does not invariably give rise to physiological addiction and there may be no significant physical effects of withdrawal.
39. When computing uplift from a Marie-type graph such situations would give rise to an overestimate of uplift for the Carboniferous.
40. These give rise to pegmatites, very coarse-grained rocks that may include crystals as much as several meters across.
41. The general sense of dog would of course give rise to anomaly in 26, because of the rule of maximisation.
42. A multiple transfer of assets may be time consuming if consents are required and may give rise to unnecessary stamp duty.
43. Responses to these questions will be varied, and each will give rise to a number of subsidiary questions.
44. Yet it has the potential to give rise to all of those cell types, and many more.
45. The six neighbors give rise to a new measure, the coordination number.
46. It is pretty hard to see how such mechanical interactions can give rise to consciousness.Sentence dictionary
47. Daily shaving can give rise to a number of skin problems.
48. It is these odours which give rise to problems, being technically difficult to control at such low levels.
49. The social acceptability of a disability may, therefore, be more important than the limitations it may give rise to.
50. In inter-continental collision orogens major sustained horizontal stresses can be generated which give rise to recumbent folds.
51. Some drama excerpts would give rise to a lot of discussion about relationships between the characters.
52. The concealed roof timbers are then subjected to conditions of continual vaporisation and condensation which give rise to wet and dry rot.
53. These results give rise to the hypothesis that endothelin might increase the tissue type plasminogen activator activity accompanying the gastric mucosal injury.
54. Their cumulative effect would give rise to the microwave background radiation.
55. Mightn't it merely give rise to a new, psychologistic, feminist reductionism?
56. Negative Richardson number corresponds to a destabilizing density gradient; both shear and buoyancy give rise to turbulence generation.
57. This can give rise to the mistaken belief that cocaine is not an addictive drug.
58. At present some criminal legislation will give rise to an action on proof of special damage and some will not.
59. The research will analyse the changing structure of leadership and the conditions which give rise to political stability and instability.
60. Varicose veins Hormone changes and weight gain give rise to varicose veins.
61. Cannabis may have few immediate withdrawal effects and this again may give rise to the mistaken belief that it is not addictive.
62. It is far from clear, even using the Diplock test, which statutes will give rise to civil liability.
63. It will be argued subsequently that the present forms of science and technology will in any case give rise to structural unemployment.
64. In both instances earlier discovery might obviously give rise to great savings in costs.
65. The ability of plants to give rise to such variation has both advantages and disadvantages.
66. Which give rise to high rate of premium.
67. This may give rise to a more severe have, have-not mentality, causing resentment toward those nations with a higher carrying capacity.
68. The glycine can give rise to serine with the elimination of carbon dioxide and ammonia.
69. The substitution is believed to result from the difference of their dissolubility which can give rise to incongruent dissolution between ettringite and chromate ettringite.
70. That would that would give rise to a perpetual motion machine, breaking of the second law. It can't happen.
71. Like other antihistamines, Antistine, too, may give rise to allergic reactions.
72. Hematopoietic stem cells are multipotent stem cells that give rise to all blood cell types. They can be found in the bone marrow of adults.
73. On germination, the zygospore undergoes meiosis to produce haploid cells that give rise to a new thallus.
74. Inhaling second difference cyanic acid esters would damage lung, causing headaches, bronchitis and asthma, may also give rise to individual breathing difficulties.
75. The Germans were promised that monetary union would not give rise to fiscal transfers, and would create a currency at least as stable as the Deutschmark.
76. Degassing impulses give rise to the strengthening of oceanic crust spreading which is correlated with phases of diastrophism creating folded orogenic belts.
77. By definition an exclusively difunctional monomer can only give rise to a linear polymer.
78. The proofs of computability give rise to Turing algorithms, which may possibly be translated into numerical algorithms.
79. When combined with cyanuric acid, which may also be present in melamine powder, melamine can form crystals that can give rise to kidney stones.
80. Hawking was forced to backpedal a bit on his stance in 1997, after new calculations revealed a limited set of conditions that could give rise to naked singularities.
81. So, the idea here is, repeated pairings of the unconditioned stimulus and the conditioned stimulus will give rise to the response.
82. Pollen mother cells undergo meioses through simultaneous cytokinesis and give rise to tetrads of microspores, which are mostly terahedrally arranged.
83. There's a radially symmetric blob, and a double-lobed blob with a node in the middle – just like the patterns of electron density that the s and p atomic orbitals give rise to.
84. Gould theorized that over the course of evolution, a tendency toward neoteny might have helped give rise to human beings.
85. Advertisements addressed to the general public and relied upon by the plaintiff may give rise to an express or implied warranty so as to form the basis of a products liability action.
86. A series of complex calamities caused by Microtus fortis calamorum population of Dongting Lake give rise to enormous economic loss on agricultural outputs.
87. If the results of this Agreement give rise to substantial commercial benefits to the Client, it may, at its sole discretion, make an ex gratia payment to the Consultant.
88. Viruses can give rise to two different types of phenomena: transformation and lytic infection.
89. Generally, the minute and complicated instrument calibration procedure and inefficient management give rise to frequent problems in calibration accuracy.
90. Rivalries could bring about pain and hatred or give rise to fighting.
91. The circumstances of modern life can give rise to the false belief that a culture full of electronics and multitasking imperatives creates the disorder.
92. These high-technology industries are subject to high risks, require large-scale production to achieve economies of scale, and give rise to extensive external economies when successful.
93. Such cultures could give rise to vascular tissues, roots and shoot buds.
94. The greatest brainteaser in this field has been to explain how processes in the brain give rise to subjective experiences.
95. Once the infection after artificial joint may give rise to disastrous consequences.
96. The special letters created by him give rise to several contentions.
97. A stem cell is a cell that can divide for indefinite periods in culture and is at least 'multipotent' — it can give rise to specialised cells (such as neurons or skin cells).
98. The gravity slide structures occurred in both limbs of coal measure synclines will give rise to complicated structural image in the axial part of the syncline.
99. The two aspects were likely to give rise to credit rationing.
100. Spasm of the small labyrinthine vessels can give rise to vertigo and hearing loss.
101. Malicious downloading impacts heavily on the regular online information service in academic libraries in China, and may give rise to some legal problems.
102. Many plant cells have the property of totipotency , that is, each cell carries in the genome the complete information required to give rise to an exact copy of the parent plant.
103. All Interrupt Requests (IRQs) issued by I/O devices give rise to maskable interrupts.
104. Pollen mother cells undergo meioses through simultaneous cytokinesis and give rise to tetrads of microspores, which are tetrahedrally arranged.
105. Social desires, expectations, and pressures give rise to laws, and standards of ethics do likewise.
106. "Overall, current (consolidation) policies and plans give rise to concern for a number of reasons," the ECB said in its monthly bulletin,[http:///give rise to.html] without singling out individual countries.
107. Because they can cause abdominal cramps, and even give rise to abortions caused by uterine contraction.
108. The results of the scheme so far give rise to cautious optimism.
109. Bipolar disorder (manic depression) may therefore give rise to rages in patients in either the depressive or the overexuberant phases of the disease.
110. It was necessary to consider whether dextran might give rise to breakdown products of hemoglobin, which might be nephrotoxic or hepatotoxic.
111. The microspore mother cells give rise to isobilateral tetrads by meiosis. Cytokinesis is successive. The mature pollen grains are 2-celled and are shed singly.
112. It may survive and give rise to two mononucleate hybrid cells called synkaryons.
113. The implicitness and incompleteness of consumer contracts, the constraint of information costs, and market monopolies give rise to the relatively weak contracting position of consumers.
114. The same transaction may give rise to both a civil and a criminal action.
115. He had messed up enough of these occasions to give rise to some anxieties.
116. Low - angle winter sunlight penetration can give rise to glare.
117. Overdosage may give rise to the following signs and symptoms: tremor, xcitation, convulsions, changes in blood pressure impairment of consciousness, and coma.
118. Bituminous pavement on concrete bridge is of a complex applied loads give rise to stress response.
119. Stem cells are undifferentiated ( unspecialized ) cells that can renew themselves and give rise to one or more specialized cell types with specific functions in the body.
120. Air leakage into the gas system does not generally give rise to explosions.
121. Such an approach may give rise to a research field of interest.
122. The results indicate that the liquid backmixing degree on BVT is lower, and this can give rise to transfer efficiency.
123. Take an example, the presence of dust particles, with their large inertia and small charge-to-mass ratios, give rise to new, and very low frequency modes.
124. Both of these "clearance" procedures typically give rise to extensive negotiations between OMB staff and agency officials, and usually a compromise solution is reached.
125. The implicitness and incompleteness of consumer contracts, the constrain of information costs, and market monopolies give rise to the relatively weak contracting position of consumers.
126. Segregation could not give rise to offspring with wild pig characteristic.
127. The tasty honey you make may give rise to overload dependence, undernourished.
128. In the forth part, I mainly analyze the cause that give rise to secularize standards of moral value of novels in 1990s.
129. This showed that ETPs give rise to myeloid cells in the normal thymus.
130. Overdosage may give rise to the following signs and symptoms: tremor excitation convulsions changes in blood pressure,[http:///give rise to.html] impairment of consciousness and coma.
131. Moreover, the same etiologic factor may give rise to a great diversity of eruptions.
132. They will also give rise to the result of historical revisionism.
133. Severing proteins induce kinks in the filaments and led to the formation of short filaments that rapidly depolymerize or give rise to new filaments.
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