Example sentences of "leads to the [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 An elegant staircase leads to the first floor , where the Edgsons have another living room overlooking the street .
2 Easy rock leads to the first bulge , where a swing left under the overhang gains a glorious hand-jamming crack .
3 Before the dummy is placed on the table , declarer 's left hand opponent leads to the first trick .
4 By remembering that , application of these criteria for equilibrium to equation ( 8.33 ) leads to the first derivative of that equation while the second derivative is where the subscript c denotes critical conditions .
5 This leads to the second stage of the argument , to the effect that disobeying the law undermines its authority , and is therefore contrary to the obligation to support just institutions .
6 This leads to the second disadvantage , cost , due in particular to the high price of fuel .
7 And it usually leads to the second thing which is to give some testimony .
8 This leads to the second problem , which is concerned with the exact demarcation of the North-South boundary .
9 This challenge to the assumption that the revolution can be understood primarily by studying the major actors on the political scene leads to the second major theme addressed by revisionist work : the impact made by ordinary men and women upon political developments .
10 This leads to the second point .
11 This leads to the second main characteristic of the retrovizor in Thru : unlike the Lacanian mirror , it is flawed , causing it to reflect not two but four eyes , two in their correct position and two further up the brow ( 1–3/579–81 ) .
12 The first paragraph , for example , comes from p. 10 and the second from p. 13 ; and all the connections Leech and Short make between these pages have been lost , with the result that it is not clear how the first paragraph leads to the second paragraph .
13 This leads to the second issue of open outcry .
14 This leads to the next guideline .
15 And this leads to the last and perhaps greatest check on popular sovereignty in the age of Pericles , namely Pericles himself .
16 This leads to the third repetition of the rule with the implied tone that you are stupid or deaf .
17 And that leads to the third , less obvious , reason : the market-place itself , to work efficiently , needs consumers who know how prices compare , and who act on that knowledge buying at the right price , not buying if the price is too high for this to have an influence on prices , through traders who set attractive prices competing successfully against traders who set inflated prices , it is by no means necessary for all consumers to be actively price-conscious .
18 And this leads to the third point , namely that we have asked for various new rites to be prepared .
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