Example sentences of "[not/n't] [adv] lead to " in BNC.

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1 But it also strained credulity to believe that any sort of war where any sort of nuclear weapons were available would not eventually lead to full-scale atomic destruction .
2 A Halifax spokesman stressed the £20m provision on loans to the Kentish development Burrell 's Wharf was highly prudent and would not necessarily lead to a loss of the same magnitude .
3 Saturday 's name change was the sixth this century , and the previous alterations did not necessarily lead to a radical renewal .
4 He reaffirmed the belief he held then , that the use of soft drugs did not necessarily lead to a progression to hard drugs , although he conceded that he would never have encountered any other drug if he had not become involved with smoking marijuana .
5 The results of delegation of power from LEA to schools need not necessarily lead to the sorts of negative effects for teachers outlined above .
6 The trouble is , this does not necessarily lead to greater understanding of why something represents good practice .
7 I does not necessarily lead to an increase in the price of consumer goods .
8 It is argued that this difference may be partially accounted for by the higher standard of living in Sri Lanka , but also that the motives and social composition of offenders in normal times were such that depressed economic conditions did not necessarily lead to substantial increases in criminal activities .
9 The transformation of the problematic does not necessarily lead to a transformation of the form of validity of knowledge .
10 Professor Chapman points out that this does not necessarily lead to a drop in standards of physical care , but stresses the apparent risk that patients may occasionally be made to feel ‘ merely an appendage to a machine ’ .
11 It has been rightly pointed out that a quick ball from such a scrum does not necessarily lead to a running game and that the centre of the field , already bustling with activity due to the increased fitness and range of the modern player , would be clogged up with roaming loose forwards relieved of scrummage duties .
12 Black pupils need to achieve academically in order to enter the labour market even at the lowest level in spite of evidence that qualifications do not necessarily lead to jobs ( see Brennan and McGeevor , 1987 , for example ) .
13 To abandon ‘ news values ’ as the sole criteria of the media would not necessarily lead to a dereliction of duty .
14 If so , many more Sri Lankans will die before the government learns that more killing does not necessarily lead to less .
15 Sympathy with the conditions of the poor did not necessarily lead to a desire for reform by the state but for further voluntary action .
16 In opposition to this , Kay and Silberston ( 1984 ) argue that competition would not necessarily lead to equal efficiency , since publicly owned concerns have the deep purse of public funds on which to draw .
17 It might even come to be accepted that the discovery of flaws in the original investigation need not necessarily lead to the dropping of charges but may , instead , strengthen the case against the suspect through discovery of fresh evidence or by plugging of gaps in the original investigation .
18 Keeping staff to a minimum and paying them very little obviously reduces costs , but it does not necessarily lead to good quality care .
19 Thus birth control groups during the inter-war period were careful to argue that the use of birth control would not necessarily lead to an increase in childlessness or very small families , but rather would result in better planned families and healthier mothers and children .
20 The course writer 's patterning , whether overt or covert , does not necessarily lead to the patterning he intends the learner to produce .
21 Tables 14.6 and 14.7 suggest that increased capital intensity within the UK may not necessarily lead to proportionate increases in output .
22 The government had the right to control private investment in the interests of society , and Courtauld agreed with Beveridge that to surrender this freedom would not necessarily lead to the erosion of others .
23 Individual authors could write on the decline of national intelligence but public debate did not necessarily lead to action .
24 Restricting car access does not necessarily lead to a loss of trade .
25 Although the binding to GC-rich sites may be much stronger , this need not necessarily lead to efficient catalytic cleavage .
26 Land reform does not necessarily lead to an immediate rise in output , neither does it increase a physical supply of land , nor does it significantly alter the ratio of peasants for the amount of land available .
27 In other words , Bukharin completely forgot that the extended reproduction … must not only lead to growth of c and v but also to that of α , i.e. to the growth of the individual consumption of the capitalists .
28 This exploratory and performance-based approach will not only lead to a deeper understanding of the text in question ( a dramatic exploration of a speech in Shakespeare , for instance , will show how the placing of different emphases can alter fundamentally one 's interpretation of character or meaning ) , but will also lead to an understanding of the play as theatre .
29 Although this Presbyterian nationalism did not normally lead to Jacobitism , we do see a brand of Scottish Whig Jacobitism during William 's reign , centring around the person of James Montgomerie of Skelmorlie .
30 So , while product development has been impressive , and confirms a certain level of re-investment , it does not usually lead to development of medium-sized businesses with tangible assets .
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