Example sentences of "result [prep] a [adv] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But the edge of the disc moving towards the Earth will result in a slightly different shift from that of the disc moving away from the Earth .
2 Generally those xenobiotic enzymes that are expressed in normal colon are present in small quantities ( our finding of patchy focal staining of surface epithelium would support this ) and it has been suggested that the low level of expression of biotransformation enzymes in normal colon could result in a critically low detoxification value , and hence increase the chances of carcinogenesis taking place in this tissue .
3 It might result in a variety of a certain species , but it could never result in a completely new species .
4 The first will result in a very high-performance processor code-named TFP , designed for technical computing .
5 As explained in Section 5.3.3 , this can result in a very simple spectrum , due to emission from a single vibrational level of the electronically-excited state to various vibrational levels of the electronic ground state , as shown in Fig. 6.19 .
6 The former might result in a totally false comparison with outside sources .
7 However , re-use of interface details will not necessarily result in a substantially similar expression and , in the example in Figure 3 , the expression ( program listings and structure ) may be quite different .
8 Transfer from local authorities to voluntary organisations would result in a less equitable distribution of resources , and it is difficult to see how the shortcomings of the voluntary sector could be sufficiently modified to make voluntary organisations an acceptable alternative to local authorities as providers of community care services .
9 The Climbers Club guidebook setup has been undergoing changes that should result in a much smoother flow of up to date guides without the huge time-lags that have recently featured between one volume selling out and the next one being published .
10 This can result in a relatively rapid turnover of cultural fashions , as one project of this kind succeeds another , and this area of relatively rapid innovation — often of a minor kind — has been important in the later twentieth century , as a direct function of the expansion and increased rate of internal circulation of the market itself .
11 It still represents a cost to the Exchequer and a loss of potential output , but it can be argued that it is not particularly distressing to the people concerned and , for the economy as a whole , it may actually result in a more efficient use of labour : this is because high short-run unemployment may be a reflection of greater mobility of labour between jobs and areas and consequently may result in the labour force being more suitably and productively employed .
12 Not only does this result in a more palatable food but the extrusion process makes the food more digestable and therefore more nutritious .
13 The attention given to the listener , however , did not result in a truly interactive analysis of peer communication .
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