Example sentences of "leads [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 This leads on to a major guideline for all consequences :
2 This point leads on to a further problem in sampling — which is non-response .
3 Commitment leads on to a feeling of responsible ownership , and then pride .
4 This leads on to a dramatic low and a severe craving for another dose of the stuff .
5 This leads on to a discussion about the way in which new occupations associated with the new technology are likely to emerge .
6 Such distortion of the data leads on to a misperception of problems .
7 The last point leads on to a discussion of how staff , volunteers and students are ‘ selected ’ for the scheme .
8 This leads on to a third aspect — the redistributive effect over a person 's lifetime , rather than just in the current period .
9 This leads on to a further point .
10 Whether or not this pilot study leads on to a larger project depends upon first , whether or not the aid project goes ahead , and second , whether or not the pilot study indicates that a more ambitious study is feasible .
11 A general survey of the whole span of Church history leads on to a second-level course which explores the growth and diversification of Christianity in three contexts ; the second century in the Roman Empire , early modern Europe and nineteenth-century Africa and America .
12 I can not see how they could be established in British literary education , where there are no graduate schools as such , and the narrow , uphill tunnel of A-level work leads on to the rocky , cloudy uplands of the undergraduate degree , with its confused mixture of practical criticism and thematic study , analysis and literary history , coverage and special subjects .
13 ‘ The first bite of mild curry leads on to the vindaloo , ’ he said .
14 This leads on to the third scenario , that decisions would be taken in economic and other fields at Community level , and that they would be submitted to the scrutiny of the European Parliament .
15 This leads on to the question of political culture .
16 This leads on to the final point .
17 How can viruses induce cells to enter the cycle of rapid multiplication that then leads on to the development of a tumour ?
18 This leads on to the second part of the book , in which the author begins by showing that there is a deep ambiguity in our basic concepts of causality and chance .
19 An introduction on the background and development of hand knitted lace fabrics leads on to the machine knitting methods of today : stitch types ; how they are produced ; lace charts , symbols and how to punch or mark out pattern cards , are all explained in detail and illustrated throughout with knitted samples and the appropriate charts .
20 Oak woodland covers the next stretch of hillside on the right and leads on to the Forestry Commission conifer forest .
21 The four circles are not presented as dealing with quite separate topics , such that to move from one to another would be in any sense a change of subject , but rather as four equally fundamental and interlocking dimensions of the same ground-motif that runs throughout : that Jesus Christ is the actualisation and realisation in time and history of God 's eternal decision to be God for and with man ; he is himself the everlasting covenant of God with us , and in that covenant the meaning and purpose of the created universe itself is contained ; and in him too lies the uncovering and overcoming of man 's estrangement from God by the divine ‘ No ! ’ of the cross which leads on to the ‘ Yes ! ’ of the resurrection .
22 This begins with the concept of interrupts introduced in 1.2 , and leads on to the idea of interconnecting a number of processors .
23 People might say that a woman is depriving a baby of the chance of life which leads on to the argument of ‘ when is a foetus human ? ’ etc …
24 In turn this leads on to the problems to do with the extent to which , and the conditions under which , respondents accurately report their beliefs , attitudes and , ultimately , to the extensive and impressive technology of interview and attitude measurement .
25 At the beginning we are confronted by a huge battle which leads on to the deaths of loyal knights .
26 The Americans could take this a little further , but after Schweinfurt they had to stop and lick their wounds ; and so this leads on to the inevitable topic when I am confronted with the audiences I meet in all those places .
27 Follow the track for a short way until a path leads on through the bogs beside the Allt a ‘ Mhuilinn .
28 First , it leads on from the cross of Jesus to his resurrection , from condemnation to vindication , from destruction to restoration .
29 This section of land lies between the canal and the River Tame and leads along to the A5127 northeast-bound where there might be room for a vehicle to pull off the road into the gateway to load up beneath the M6 .
30 A track , starting close to Froggatt Pinnacle , leads down through the birchwoods , between moss-clad boulders and crackling bracken , to emerge on the main road near the Chequers .
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