Example sentences of "lead to [noun sg] for " in BNC.

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1 Ties with extended kin are very much a matter of personal choice ; those with members of one 's nuclear family are more enduring and more likely to lead to responsibility for care .
2 Crane , however , argues 45 that affiliation to a prestigious university is more likely to lead to recognition for a scientist than higher productivity .
3 Crane , however , argues that affiliation to a prestigious university is more likely to lead to recognition for a scientist than higher productivity .
4 The state is better able to protect the corporate ‘ grass ’ because he ( or she ) could be guaranteed a job for life as a reward for information leading to conviction for a serious corporate crime .
5 Yet the resulting stress levels , unless properly handled by both the company and the individual , can prove overwhelming , leading to distress for the employee and problems for the company with rising absenteeism , high levels of staff turnover and staff dissatisfaction , and ultimately to poor quality products and customer service .
6 The failure to prioritise needs realistically or to genuinely recognise people 's individuality sometimes leads to competition for resources which badly damages the educational chances of some individuals .
7 The combination of hot weather and high pollution levels leads to misery for hay fever and asthma sufferers , and for many it 's getting worse .
8 They can also create audiences for books which before had only a slight following , and sometimes the making of a film leads to success for the author of the book on which the film was based simply as an author .
9 It is then taken without question by organization participants that observance of these core values leads to success for themselves and ‘ the organization ’ .
10 Increasing the age at breeding leads to selection for reduced senescence , and both evolutionary theories specify that survival and fertility later in the lifespan will in consequence increase over the generations to come .
11 It is full of lies and it is this that leads to disaster for Blanche .
12 In the early 1960s the king became a major actor in the events that led to independence for his country in 1968 .
13 Of 77 patients with a diagnosis , two had disturbances in skin perfusion ( one other patient had this , but was subsequently found to have fabricated illness ) ; both had episodes of severe pallor and diagnosis led to reassurance for their parents .
14 That led to warfare for about three months in our house .
15 Despite a programme of Russification ( including a ban on the use of Ukrainian in schools and publications ) , a strongly nationalist movement emerged in the late nineteenth century which led to pressure for greater autonomy and a brief period of independence immediately after the October revolution .
16 Although this can lead to frustration for car drivers — especially in the summer when large queues build up — it helps limit the environmental damage to this very special area .
17 If it works appropriate use of technologies and procedures will lead to success for any health plan .
18 The policy of withholding funds for investment in the reconstruction of the Basque Country , Catalonia and Asturias was a deliberate , punitive gesture , as well as a precautionary measure , lest too rapid or too successful economic recovery should lead to agitation for the political autonomy to which they had aspired — and , in the case of the Basque Country and Catalonia , enjoyed — under the Republic .
19 Hopefully this may lead to publicity for these benefactors .
20 Section 5 covers convictions for minor offences , e.g. a failure to deliver a return , account or document to the Registrar of Companies , and may lead to disqualification for a maximum period of five years .
21 The Banbury Baptist Church who invited Millard Fuller here … believes this seed planting mission could lead to Habitat for Humanity eventually setting up a nationwide centre based in the town .
22 Alternatively , laws-of-war considerations can lead to advocacy of the enhanced radiation weapon or neutron bomb , on the grounds that it is aimed specifically to destroy military targets ( Johnson , 1984 , pp. 46–7 ) — but this could lead to pressure for first use of nuclear weapons .
23 Ride along with it as philosophically as you can , and try not to take your own hurt feelings or sense of irritation out on your mother-in-law , as this will only lead to unhappiness for you all .
24 I have already mentioned the principal reason — that we are predators and our ravishing of the earth 's resources , if continued at its present rate , will lead to disaster for our patient planet .
25 The unpredictability of death can easily lead to embarrassment for the firm , not least because of the fundamental obligation of the personal representatives of a deceased partner to realise the assets comprised in his estate at an early date : and one of these assets will be the deceased 's share in the surplus assets of the firm or ( where the agreement so provides ) the right to be paid out for the value of that share .
26 Then , in a light haze of vodka in a Toronto hotel room , came the moment that would finally lead to recognition for Nicholson as an actor .
27 RECESSION has led to misery for millions but none more so than workers made Redundant and those whose homes have been Repossessed .
28 Very frequently the signals from large farmers and highly productive areas lead to competition for resources with those from small farmers and relatively unproductive areas .
29 Er says in in the second sentence of the paragraph that locations most readily accessibly to West Yorkshire conurbation are likely to stimulate competition within the housing market to the potential detriment of local residents and lead to pressure for addis additional land releases .
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