Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] lead [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The rise in the price of oil had little immediate impact , but the collapse of world stock markets , the fall in demand , especially in the USA , for Hong Kong exports and the fear that Japanese banks would cut back on investment all led to growth predictions being revised downwards , in some instance to negative growth . |
2 | And it brought Joy more than admiring glances — her cute car also led to romance . |
3 | Three regular meals a day avoiding snacks often leads to weight reduction . |
4 | If only she could be with her , give her a hug , the affection and understanding she needed , at the same time trying to make her see that issuing ultimatums inevitably led to war — whether it was between countries or lovers ! |
5 | Width often leads to superficiality and depth may produce a blinkered approach and an intellectual treadmill . |
6 | His exceptional progress soon led to exhibition matches and tours of western Europe , and on to America , where his family settled in 1920 . |
7 | Britain at that time , like much of the European continent — including Italy — was ruled by strong personalities in small units , sometimes called ‘ Kingdoms ’ , and invasions from other countries sometimes led to settlement . |
8 | Enthusiasm usually leads to growth , when coupled with sensitivity and knowledge . |
9 | Their subject-matter is les petites gens , the ordinary people Simenon is said to understand so well , and their tumultuous lives in which jealousy , blackmail and greed generally lead to suicide or murder . |
10 | Blind faith in training for training 's sake soon leads to disillusionment and frustration . |
11 | In order to understand them better we therefore need to examine their influence ; and this process of investigation also leads to elaboration . |
12 | The practice of ahi sā inevitably leads to Truth . |
13 | Working on an exhibition of this nature inevitably leads to reflection on the artist : ‘ The more I work on Rembrandt , the more fascinated I am and the more remarkable he becomes ’ was Christopher Brown 's assessment , ‘ in range , ambition and the achievement of that ambition he stands so far above his contemporaries ’ . |
14 | If it is your own mother who is bereaved , the fact that you are grieving too will probably help you both a good deal , as you will be able to share your sorrow and comfort each other ; though in some families shared sorrow occasionally leads to friction and unreasonable apportioning of blame for trivial or imagined omissions in the course of the terminal illness of the deceased . |
15 | All roads probably led to City Hall . |
16 | Despite the claims by many that advanced levels of technological development somehow lead to democracy and scientific thought , the ‘ advanced ’ states of the modern world would not necessarily emerge very favourably from a comparison of degrees of historical ‘ objectivity ’ , however defined . |
17 | It failed to resolve the question of foreign influence in Korea , which a decade later led to war between China and Japan . |
18 | These conflicting ideas between party committees and student campaigners nearly led to confrontation at Beida , where the student elected to the local congress was denied his seat . |
19 | Skipper Alan Kernaghan again led by example , with Nicky Mohan solid as a rock alongside him . |
20 | By the time Tiare was ten , her mother made the girl promise never to marry until she was at least nineteen , telling her that hasty love affairs never led to happiness . |
21 | The experience often leads to depression and serious illness ; indeed many people die shortly after retiring . |
22 | But narration is seen in The Dear Deceit as the original and persistent obstacle to ‘ truth ’ because the process of constructing a story inevitably leads to falsification . |
23 | The results of these changes are a leakage of pepsinogen into the circulation leading to elevated plasma pepsinogen levels and the loss of plasma proteins into the gut lumen eventually leading to hypoalbuminaemia . |
24 | But attempts at social engineering usually lead to downfall . |
25 | Inability to absorb iron also leads to anaemia . |
26 | In psychoanalytic theory the attachment of a boy to his mother which leads to emulation of the father also leads to rivalry . |
27 | Since it is more expensive to install pollution control devices in existing installations than in new ones , this strategy often leads in practice to the specification of different requirements for new and existing units . |
28 | 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 . |
29 | Will the sanctions placed on Iraq eventually lead to peace in the Gulf ? |
30 | This can have the effect of accelerating the build-up of atheroma which in turn eventually leads to heart disease . |