Example sentences of "lead [adv] to [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The search for new policies led additionally to the widespread adoption of monetary targets in most economies , including the UK , apparently giving some acceptance of the monetarist claim that inflation is a consequence of a rapid growth in the money supply . |
2 | His first one-man show was at The Artists Gallery 1941 and he showed with Peggy Guggenheim 's Art of this Century in 1944 which led on to a one man-show at the Guggenheim in 1947 . |
3 | It was painted while and there was an untidy hedge in front of it , divided by a rickety gate which led on to a short path to the front door . |
4 | He turned his back to her and walked off into the open-plan living-room , with its huge glass patio doors that led on to the front garden . |
5 | Which led on to the obvious conclusion . ’ |
6 | A beautifully open and controlled solo from Andrew Coy ( clarinet ) led on to an expansive string sound and a rollicking dance . |
7 | There was a trap-door in the centre of the kitchen floor , which led down to a deep cellar . |
8 | Outside them , by an open area and a covered section , a small flight of steps led down to a low outbuilding which faced the open area . |
9 | Beyond this , four short steps led down to an oval door let into a solid steel bulkhead . |
10 | Bypassing the entrance to the huge living-room , which looked dim and shadowy in the faint glow from the circular night-lights sunk into the wooden-slat ceiling , she followed the passageway until she came to another flight of steps , which obviously led down to the lowest level of the house . |
11 | So Lewis drove down to the bottom of South Parks Road , where he was ushered through into the University Parks by a policeman on duty at the entrance to the single-track road which led down to the bathing area . |
12 | Beyond the tower a narrow path led down to the rocky shore below . |
13 | Eventually he was at the top of the slope that led down to the little towns of Streatley and Goring , separated , like their respective counties of Berkshire and Oxfordshire , by the River Thames . |
14 | The Act provided for a route commencing at the top of Anerley Hill , descending past Crystal Palace ( Low Level ) Station to Thicket Road , a turning on the left , which led through to the top end of Beckenham Road , Penge . |
15 | Penguin has a brand new series of ready Readers , a mixture of classic and modern stories at three levels and designed to lead in to the same publisher 's Simply Stories series . |
16 | A farm track led off to the left opposite , flanked by deep drainage ditches . |
17 | The work involved in compiling the Register — in particular tracking down current addresses — led directly to a Grand Reunion of past pupils and staff , which took place on Saturday 26th June . |
18 | Since fires often start at night , and most homes only have one flight of stairs , which may well be unusable , it pays to work out in advance possible escape routes from upstairs windows — ideally one leading on to a flat roof , otherwise one with a flowerbed or grass below , rather than a hard surface . |
19 | It was still there , a gap where a gate should have been , leading on to a rutted farm track . |
20 | Some worksheets may begin with simple lower order questions , leading on to a higher order question . |
21 | Leading on to the second half I 'd er very quickly like to introduce you to Huw er from er one of the U K's if in fact er worldwide now leading er leading developers of of financial software , and he will be er talking to th talking through to you his experiences er in developing with . |
22 | It was also during this period that his single-engined fighter designs began appearing , starting with the Yak–1 and leading on to the classic Yak–3 — later developed into the familiar Yak–11 trainer . |
23 | A general survey of the whole span of Church history leads on to a second-level course which explores the growth and diversification of Christianity in three contexts ; the second century in the Roman Empire , early modern Europe and nineteenth-century Africa and America . |
24 | This leads on to a major guideline for all consequences : |
25 | This leads on to a third aspect — the redistributive effect over a person 's lifetime , rather than just in the current period . |
26 | This point leads on to a further problem in sampling — which is non-response . |
27 | This leads on to a further point . |
28 | Whether or not this pilot study leads on to a larger project depends upon first , whether or not the aid project goes ahead , and second , whether or not the pilot study indicates that a more ambitious study is feasible . |
29 | This leads on to the second part of the book , in which the author begins by showing that there is a deep ambiguity in our basic concepts of causality and chance . |
30 | This leads on to the final point . |