Example sentences of "lead [adv prt] to [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | This led on to many of our older members recalling their experiences too . |
2 | The funeral itself will be a painful but important occasion for her , as this , and all the ritual connected with it , will be her first big step forward into the grieving process which is to lead on to final recovery . |
3 | But they did not want change and the link to be forged if it were to lead on to wild and radical measures for democracy , equality , and a social revolution that would threaten their larger position of power within the developing economy . |
4 | Open Forum is to be a conference-led event with both technical and business streams , designed to lead up to 1993 and the establishment of the single European market — and the Commission of the European Communities has been closely involved in its organisation , says Borkovsky , promising more details in the future . |
5 | Everything always seemed to lead back to that place . |
6 | From the large entrance hall , old oak doors and passages led off to other parts of the house , a large open staircase facing them . |
7 | Once clear of the Swamp a number of minor paths led off to left and right . |
8 | This enhancement leads on to new stages in cognitive complexity : |
9 | From the fact that it leads on to all sorts of other questions , we can reasonably infer that many of the justifications given in the literature are indeed question-begging . |
10 | It leads on to one of the basic processes of geographical inquiry , to study the impact of processes occurring over time on different areas . |
11 | Another steep descent leads on to grassy col and then yet more superb ridge walking , narrow and exposed , over Sgurr nan Saighead ( 3,047ft ) . |
12 | The second concern is that evaluation is largely a wasted exercise unless it leads on to some action . |
13 | This leads on to some general considerations about decision-making in a bureaucracy . |
14 | The man in charge of the force 's drug squad says cannabis leads on to harder drugs |
15 | This leads on to basic office systems and personnel records . |
16 | Discussion of budgeting and costs leads on to another important factor . |
17 | This can also lead to the development of a wide range of knowledge and skills , as nearly all educational problems are multi-faceted and one problem inevitably leads on to another . |
18 | He could see the long walkway below him , the small iron gates at each end with steps leading down to both sides of the house . |
19 | This has been a wine producing area for years and there are many ‘ heurigen ’ ( wine houses ) , with their ornately carved wooden gates leading through to shady courtyards and ‘ Flaschenwein ’ signs indicating that local wine is available . |
20 | Yet standing in its austere reception hall , leading off to early Romano-British antiquities in one direction and library halls in the other , it is hard to deny the scope for a more populist approach . |
21 | The road for the tunnel here bears off to the left and rises up along the glorious valley of Aragnouet , half pasture , half pine woods , past a road leading off to another new ski station , at Piau-Engaly . |
22 | In the weeks leading up to Live Aid , each singer and band forgot their ego and worked towards a common cause — raising cash for the starving thousands . |
23 | As a result of the Local Government Act 1972 , section 262 , much of this legislation was repealed ( and in some localities replaced ) successively in the years leading up to 1986 . |
24 | It quoted Brazil 's National Institute for Research as calculating that 120,300 square miles of forest had been destroyed in the years leading up to 1989 . |
25 | For Mrs Thatcher , at loggerheads with many of her own party over European issues , this summit was crucial , as it set the tone for debates leading up to 1992 — not only for European unification but for the next British election in which Europe will be a deciding factor . |
26 | The idea of distinctive features was put forward in the early 1930s by Bloomfield ( 1933 ) and Trubetzkoy ( various publications leading up to 1939 ) ; however , in early work and in present-day functional phonology , the features are worked out individually for the language being studied . |
27 | What he 'd been leading up to all week ? |
28 | Though there had been in the years leading up to 1832 theoretical choice between these two ways forward , towards political democracy or towards industrial democracy , few would have distinguished the two so sharply before the passage of the Reform Bill . |
29 | This could only be leading up to one thing : when are you going to marry my daughter ? |
30 | If you eventually failed to agree at that level , then you would have to register failure to agree as you did in all other cases you know , leading up to that stage . |