When the King's Speech was to be drawn up for the opening of the Imperial Parliament, the Catholic Question naturally occurred and gave rise to a good deal of discussion in the Cabinet.
On Midsummer day Villiers suggested means for assuring the veto of the physicians on the projected visit to Weymouth, in view of the extravagance and inconvenience of the plans to which it gave rise.
During many centuries it gave rise to the direst superstition and fanaticism.
The analogy, thus accidentally suggested, gave rise to the idea that they might be actual waterways.
It gave rise to an unauthorized incorporation of the moneyed interest, and placed it as far as possible from the reach of future Legislative influence.
The bones of extinct animals of monstrous size, so frequently met with, gave rise, as well they might, to the story of the giants.
On the other hand, it gave riseto despair in other people.
I do not know whether it is the result of that literature but gradually it gave rise to an agitation which it is difficult to describe--I mean the reactionary agitation of Sashadhar and his friends.
Huxley's anatomical work was essentially living and stimulating, and too often it has become lost to sight simply because of the vast superstructures of new facts to which it gave rise.
It gave rise, directly or indirectly, to the great wars of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as well as to those rival sects which agitated the theological world.
The former existence of so many separate sovereignties and "fountains of honour" gave rise to a great many hereditary titles of nobility.
The isolation and retirement in which the Archduke lived, and the regrettably restricted intercourse he had with other circles, gave rise to the circulation of some true, besides numerous false, rumours.
The crime that was enacted at Debruzin, which made such a sensation at the time, gave rise to suspicions of a Russo-Roumanian attempt at assassination.
The most impossible of the German demands, namely, the occupation of Roumania for five to six years after the conclusion of peace, gave rise to great difficulties.
This unsettled state of affairs in the internal conditions of Russia, however, gave rise to very serious delays.
The neighbourhood at length complained; and the abuse was put an end to by the Marriage Act, to which it gave rise.
One of them, a man of the name of Turner, living in Whitefriars, gave rise to a singular instance of revenge recorded in the State Trials.
Mansfield's residence in Lincoln's Inn, when Mr. Murray, gave rise to a singular reference in Pope.
The river Adonis being impregnated, during certain seasons, with volumes of dust raised from the red soil of that part of Mount Libanus near which it flows, gave rise to the fable of the periodical effusion of the blood of Adonis.
This instrument was improved and it gave rise to the contrivance of many delicate surgical instruments for operating on the eye.
So great was this loss felt that it gave rise to the prohibitory laws and the decadence in England of the manufacture of iron, already alluded to.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gave rise" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.