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Example sentences for "gives rise"

  • It gives rise to no further inconvenience than its weight and consequent discomfort.

  • The enlargement of the follicles, natural folds and rugæ gives rise to an uneven surface, but the skin remains soft and pliable.

  • It is demonstrable, that inoculation of the experimental fluid with a drop of liquid known to contain living particles, gives rise to the same phenomena as exposure to unpurified air.

  • It gives rise to a reasonable expectation of some more extensive code not unlikely to be vouchsafed us, harmonizing with, and supplementary to, the law of our moral consciousness.

  • Therefore it is that an inquiry into language, so far as is needful to guard against the errors to which it gives rise, has at all times been deemed a necessary preliminary to the study of logic.

  • Electric connections have to be made with the latter by means of cloth moistened with dilute salt solution; drying of the salt solution, however, gives rise to a variation of resistance in the electrolytic contact.

  • A transverse cut, I find, gives rise to a more intense stimulation, than a longitudinal slit.

  • Leaving aside the common chromosomes of both sexes, a fertilized egg containing XX gives rise to a female, while one containing XY gives rise to a male.

  • The ventral process of cells is the most important structure in the stolon in that it gives rise both to the alimentary and respiratory sacks, and to the generative organs of the sexual Salps.

  • In addition to the parts already mentioned the mesoblast gives rise to the whole of the vascular system, and to the generative system.

  • The unnatural distention of the stomach with food causes it to press upon the neighboring organs, interfering with the proper performance of their functions, and, if frequently repeated, gives rise to serious disease.

  • Tobacco itself, when its use becomes habitual and excessive, gives rise to the most unpleasant and dangerous pathological conditions.

  • I have given your pamphlet,-"Abuse of the Male Generative Organs and the Diseases to which it Gives Rise," to quite a number of young men whom I had reason to suspect it might benefit.

  • The variety of them we have just been considering as occurring in pork is called the Cysticercus cellulosae, whilst the tapeworm to which it gives rise is known as the Tinea solium.

  • It gives rise to a very troublesome eruption, attended with a watery discharge.

  • In Paris this gas is employed by gold- and silversmiths and electro-platers because it gives rise to no sulphur product and burns without giving off soot or smoke.

  • But, beside impelling the individual to react to certain definite kinds of stimuli with certain definite types of conduct, an instinct, when stimulated, gives rise in every case to an emotion which is characteristic of it.

  • But, in man, the forms of conduct, to which it gives rise, may be extremely varied.

  • Second, an affective part through which it gives rise to the emotion which is characteristic of it.

  • Third, an efferent or conative part through which it gives rise to a characteristic type of conduct.

  • Although the shock in its passage under the deep ocean gives no trace of its progress, it no sooner gets into soundings or shallow water, than it gives rise to another and smaller wave of the sea.

  • The multiplication, also, of shells and corals in particular spots, and for limited periods, gives rise occasionally to lines of separation, and divides a mass which might otherwise be homogeneous into distinct strata.

  • In like manner sadness is the accidental cause of pleasure, in so far as it gives rise to the apprehension of something pleasant.

  • Or we may say that although the desired good itself is future, yet the hindrance is reckoned as present, and so gives rise to sorrow.

  • It gives rise to the fallacy of "question-begging names.

  • Each individual man drew his life from another, and to another man he gives rise, losing, in point of fact, his aspect of individuality when these his race connexions are considered.

  • A stick, having a spark of fire at one end, gives rise to the appearance of a circle of light when it is turned round quickly.

  • For it is exactly in the most serious kind of poetry that this fear must torment them the most; for extremes run into one another, and whenever pathos fails it gives rise to laughter and parody.

  • The paternal curse, and the blindness to which it gives rise, carry headlong the two brothers to the unnatural strife in which they both fall by the hands of each other.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gives rise" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    after that; average height; better system; call him; common life; deceitful tongue; exactly similar; extraordinary degree; gives birth; gives himself; gives rise; gives the; gives the following account; gives them; indeterminate sentence; individual property; little mother; look mighty; looking hard; marine fishes; one sees; rushed forward; salt marshes; several waters; that they; took charge