Of the injurious nematodes, giving rise to avian epizoöty, probably one of the most destructive is Ascaris maculosa infesting pigeons.
Unquestionably the common Tænia expansa is capable of giving rise to severe epizoöty among lambs.
It occupied the cavity of a pustule in the upper lip, giving rise to considerable irritation.
And in sexual reproduction we have a constantly varying series of experiments in germinal combinations, some of which, we may fairly suppose, will be successful in giving rise to new or favourable variations.
It is this abundant liberation of energy, giving rise to many and complex activities, which is one of the distinguishing features of animals as compared with plants.
Mr. Herbert Spencer draws attention[DL] to the diminished efficiency in ear-muscles, giving rise to the drooping ears of many domesticated animals.
As is the case with extravasations of blood elsewhere, the hæmoglobin of the escaped corpuscles later undergoes a series of changes, giving rise to a succession of brown, blue, greenish and yellowish coloration.
These run dangerously near the sensitive structures, giving rise in many cases to lameness.
It affords a greater protection to the foot, and does not allow of fragments of stone and flint getting in between the foot and the shoe, and so giving rise to further mischief.
These are rarely found in the horse, but may occupy the hepatic ducts, giving rise to jaundice and to colicky pains.
It would seem that the inquisitors construed their powers in the most liberal fashion, giving rise to abuses which called for repression and a limitation of their jurisdiction.
In sheep they occasion fearful mortality, giving rise to the disease known as 'the rot,' and killing thousands of flocks annually.
Thielbierge's suggestion consists in passing air over protochloride of iron, and so giving rise to peroxide of iron and chlorine.
When thus produced, it is in white, milky crystals, which speedily deliquesce in the air, giving rise to ethionic acid.
It follows that if the edge of the ice remained constant in position for any considerable period of time, large quantities of drift would have accumulated under its marginal portion, giving rise to a belt of relatively thick drift.
In the course of time they would be destroyed, giving rise to a new level surface much below the old one, but developed in the same position which the old one occupied when it originated; that is, a position but little above sea level.
A typical kame is a hill, hillock, or less commonly a short ridge of stratified drift; but several or many are often associated, giving rise to groups and areas of kames.
The object of such operations is to arrest or eradicate the disease which, by further extension through the bony walls of the temporal bone, might eventually cause death by giving rise to some suppurative intracranial complication.
With this, localized areas of necrosis or abscesses may occur, giving rise to painful swellings on the head, and usually are accompanied by cellulitis of the scalp, pyrexia, and intense headaches.
Still, the posterior (cerebral) wall may yield, giving rise to meningitis or cerebral abscess.
This group is one of the utmost importance in Toxicology, and includes substances acting in many different ways, all, however, giving rise to the common symptoms of gastric irritation.
Sometimes also blood is effused into the visceral walls, giving rise to an appearance resembling gangrene.
When sufficiently diluted to be inspired it acts by absorption, giving rise to giddiness, headache, vomiting, a tendency to sleep, and loss of muscular power.
Unslaked or imperfectly slaked lime may also prove fatal by being inhaled, and so giving rise to inflammation of the glottis.
Occasionally the whole fall is swayed away from the front of the cliff, then suddenly dashed flat against it, or vibrated from side to side like a pendulum, giving rise to endless variety of forms and sounds.
Defn: A spasmodic state of the glottis, giving rise to contraction or closure of the opening.
Frequently, perhaps usually, the minerals of composite veins are deposited in succession, instead of cotemporaneously, giving rise to the remarkable banded structure so characteristic of this class of veins.
The iron core of a transformer acts as a closed conductor in which small pressures of different values are induced in different parts by the alternating field, giving rise to eddy currents.
There is also a certain critical voltage above which the film breaks down locally, giving rise to a luminous and somewhat disruptive discharge accompanied by a rapid rise of temperature and fall in efficiency.
On the other hand, a machinery of a totally different kind seems capable of giving rise to effects of the required magnitude.
The whole series of beds may then again have been thrown into a nearly horizontal position, giving rise to the superposition of crystalline upon fossiliferous formations.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "giving rise" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.