Example sentences of "inevitably leads [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If talking things over inevitably leads to a row , then you 're to blame too , even though he may be driving you to over-react .
2 These are excellent , but their exclusive use robs the subject of a personal and local dimension and inevitably leads to a measure of stereotyping .
3 The issue of communication as a human right is also related to development and inevitably leads to a process of conscientisation and media education .
4 This cultural empathy inevitably leads to a fusion of individual expression and tradition that is far more pronounced than that found in any other category of oriental rug .
5 This inevitably leads to a climate in which the likelihood of giving not only money but also one 's time is reduced .
6 This is a foolish policy which inevitably leads to a waste of nursing resources .
7 This requires the development of a product control team and inevitably leads to a mound of paperwork and forms .
8 The academic institutionalizing of literary study inevitably leads to the establishing of canons ( made necessary , among much else , by the logistic requirements of reading lists and bookshop orders ) , and where there are canons evaluation is , in the context of pedagogy , either impossible or unrewardingly difficult , since canonization implies merit .
9 He does not devote space to what may be the most disturbing aspect of all — namely , the failure appropriately to diagnose conditions , which inevitably leads to the denial of appropriate treatment and the reinforcement of maladaptive behaviours .
10 Crossing with other such genotypes inevitably leads to the breakdown of this optimum ( hence the name ) and formation of new genotypes to be filtered by the new conditions .
11 Moreover this policy positively invites tit-for-tat measures if or when another political party takes over , and this eventually and inevitably leads to an escalation of censorship .
12 One of the more obvious disadvantages of the monist position is that it almost inevitably leads to an obliteration of the distinction between essential and inessential , or accidental ( " extrinsic " ) properties , or features of things .
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