Example sentences of "[verb] lead we [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Our discussion of the evolution of the logogen model has led us to the following view of the organisation of the mental lexicon .
2 Thus , a consideration of earlier work on DMVs has led us to the conclusion that the settlement patterns we actually see on the maps and in the landscape consist of a range of settlements , at various stages of development at all periods ; everything , in fact , from surviving medieval villages to totally abandoned farm sites .
3 it 's arrogance and inflexibility which has led us to where we are today , and that 's on the brink of the crisis .
4 This discussion has led us into the third and perhaps most important question : since the assumptions will generally be untrue , how robust are the results to minor modifications of the assumptions of the model ?
5 The bulk of this chapter has been taken up with a discussion of the relationship between the undergraduate curriculum and just two of Lawton 's eight ‘ cultural sub-systems ’ — the social and the economic although the latter has led us into areas which are a long way from the purely economic , and seems to yield a useful typology of undergraduate courses .
6 Addressing a rally on March 9 organized by the Democratic Russia group , Yeltsin called on his fellow radicals to " declare war on the leadership of the country , which has led us into a quagmire " .
7 That ability has led us into the more specialized areas and it has demonstrated that success was not just getting through the traumas of the 70s and taking costs out of the business , but in finding different directions in which to take the business . ’
8 Erm a and that has , that has led us from the group back to the individual tenants , and one
9 Our dominant motivations are those of rational self-interest and they tend to lead us into crime because crime , however defined , involves self-restraint .
10 The advice we have received leads us to the conclusion that we should ask the Court of Appeal to rule on this important point of principle involved in this case . ’
11 Just as surely God desires to lead us to a knowledge of genuine Christian fellowship , so surely must we be overwhelmed by a great general disillusionment with others , with Christians in general , and , if we are fortunate , with ourselves .
12 We fully support and endorse the deposit greenbelt boundaries , then I think it 's inescapable that at at some point that is going to lead us to leapfrogging over the greenbelt boundary , at some stage during the the the plan period , there may well be sufficient erm commitment and identified sites to mop up in in the short term , but by the end of of the plan period it 's it 's my belief that there will be a need to address this issue by bringing forward proposals for a new settlement , er which obviously Selby district er full fully supports .
13 Off we go Dee 's going to lead us over there .
14 Nannette erm is going to lead us in our .
15 Our policy on endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography may have led us to over estimate the association , but without performing endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography on unselected patients with HIV infection ( with and without cryptosporidiosis ) , precise figures can not be given .
16 Well Peter I 'm sorry but the notice only said once , Winston is meant to lead us into that I 'm sorry .
17 Our discussions of last week seem to have lead us to the Railway Tavern at 12–12:30 .
18 After this , we might fairly expect our journey to have led us to some certainties about the language .
19 It is not pleasant to be shot at , and even the pleasure of being missed is spoilt by the mind 's habit of constructing alternative scenarios ; if the machine-gunner had been a bit quicker to react , or had led us with more skill , we would now be nothing but a heap of molten metal somewhere in the sea-grape .
20 But who is qualified to lead us on this Crusade ?
21 ‘ Besides , we ca n't kill her until she 's led us to the book or at least told us where we can find it . ’
22 With all these formal and informal constraints , we can see that pure freedom for the individual actor is very unlikely ; considering all these expectations and controls that surround us , Berger 's portrayal of society as a prison begins to seem plausible : ‘ Our considerations of the sociological perspective have led us to a point where society looks more like a gigantic Alcatraz than anything else ’ ( Berger , 1966 , p. 107 ) .
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