Example sentences of "that it lead to " in BNC.

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1 His impact was such that it led to further villainy — as the probably gay hit man in the Big Combo ( 1955 ) , as a rapist and murderer in Ride Lonesome ( 1959 ) , as Lee Marvin 's psychotic side-kick in The Man Who Shot Liberty Vallance ( 1962 ) as well as more conventional heavies in Gunfight at the OK Corral ( 1956 ) , The Tin Star ( 1957 ) and How the West Was Won ( 1962 ) .
2 And the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950 looked so very like the preliminaries to the Third World War that it led to Eisenhower again becoming the Allied Supreme Commander , Europe , with Montgomery as his deputy in November to prepare resistance to a probable Soviet invasion across the Iron Curtain .
3 The entrance was on the second deck , a large double door now wide open that Delaney remembered from before , thinking at the time that it led to a storage area .
4 She took a path across the land at the side of the house and found that it led to a small wood which girdled the top of the hill on which the house was built .
5 She did not know it well , only that it led to a clump of trees at the top called Beckwith 's Folly .
6 Only a quarter say that it led to in-service training and a fifth think that it improved staff relations and improved teaching methods .
7 It was by then already obvious that the schools had overcome their first reservations er about what the scheme had to offer and it was so obvious that they deserved recognition for their efforts that it led to my colleagues , Councillor and putting down the motion to Council in April of this year , drawing attention to the continuing success in schools throughout the district of the Local Management initiative .
8 A door at the far end was a little ajar , showing that it led to a white-tiled wash-room .
9 The last folly was finished in nineteen thirty-six and provoked such a public outcry that it led to the first-ever planning inquiry .
10 The ‘ Principles ’ of his title are those ‘ of Human Knowledge ’ , and what motivates his objection to materialism is that it leads to scepticism and atheism .
11 Rawls shows neither that this assumption follows from the Kantian insight nor that it leads to neutral political concern .
12 At roughly the same time Terence said , ‘ Another objection to Christianity is that it leads to passive acceptance of social inequalities because the real rewards are in … ’
13 A recent commentator , Martin Hollis , even fears that it leads to the ‘ social destruction of reality ’ ( Hollis 1982 : 83 ) .
14 Any such claim would therefore have to be framed in terms of the interest theory ; yet , as even the advocates of such an approach admit ( Campbell , 1985 , p. 20 ) this involves open-ended and controversial issues as to which interests deserve protection , and some have argued that it leads to a disintegration of any distinctive or effective notion of a right ( Simmonds , 1985 ) .
15 Apart from the obvious point that it fails to produce uniformity its principal defect is that it leads to the application of a particular national law which is likely to have been devised for domestic transactions and may well be ill-suited to those which are international in character .
16 The great claim made for perfect competition is that it leads to efficiency .
17 One is that it displaces wage costs out of the more expensive core to the somewhat cheaper periphery ; another is that it leads to stable long-term relations with suppliers which open up multi-directional flows of information between the partners in the subcontracting network .
18 The authors , stress on cognition has the advantage that it leads to an appreciation of the importance of the distribution of knowledge about what goods should represent , rather than merely of the distribution of the goods themselves .
19 However , corporatists are sharply critical of the pluralist perspective in so far as that perspective sees the interest-groups system as competitive , " democratic " , equal , and open to all , so that it leads to policy outcomes that give fair shares to everyone .
20 The disadvantage of the latter is that it leads to an untidy looking diagram , although it will reveal lower terraces obscured by high ground in the foreground .
21 It is also possible that it leads to a change in the Pattern of bequests .
22 In general , Solihull secondary school teachers also have a slightly negative attitude towards the efficiency of SSE using the booklet , believing that it leads to rationalization rather than criticism and as a method of SSE is too time-consuming .
23 The trouble with fitness is that it leads to mistakes about evolution because it makes people think in terms of qualitative terms .
24 The report rejects , however , the contention that economic growth in itself is unsustainable , insisting that it leads to the development of cleaner , more efficient technologies which cut pollution .
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