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

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1 A gang of workmen put a fence up across the private lane leading to the house in Beaconsfield .
2 For the training of teachers in art , further education colleges have traditionally offered the one-year full-time course leading to the Post-Graduate Certificate in Education ( Art Education ) , formerly the Art Teacher 's Diploma ( ATD ) or Certificate ( ATC ) .
3 Rain said , exasperated , that each route led to the same point and that meant back to the Tunisian .
4 At the end of a narrow lane leading to the Embankment was a tilting building with ‘ Wines from the Wood ’ in flaking gold letters arced across its glass .
5 The publication of a book by a private citizen led to the breaking-off of diplomatic relations .
6 More and more we are beginning to suspect that a similar situation may also occur with other conditions and that the suppression of symptoms with palliative therapy leads to the development , perhaps even years later , of more serious complaints .
7 Shadows wavered backwards through the green railings and down on to the sunken slipway leading to the chain-ferry .
8 Expressing this as the differential equation leads to the equation of motion of a Maxwell unit
9 At its highest point , a turn to the right up a pathless incline leads to the subsidiary height of pike which has two cairns ; from here the route , still pathless , heads due south , passing the three Whernside Tarns and rises to join a wall coming up from the left , this being kept alongside to the summit .
10 They turned into a muddy lane leading to the kennels .
11 The success of this measure led to the deregulation of local bus services in 1986 , involving the break up of the National Bus Company and the introduction of private sector competition .
12 In the absence of couple stresses this equation leads to the symmetry of the stress tensor .
13 It is argued that specific policies implemented at the outset of British rule led to the development of a judicial system which did not coincide with either British or indigenous notions of justice but which was none the less compatible with local culture .
14 This artificiality led to the zoom shot 's falling out of favour for all but occasional use ( how it helped Superman to fly will be discussed later on ) .
15 For the empirical evidence discussed in the first section of this chapter led to the conclusion that habituation and latent inhibition are subserved by different mechanisms ; it follows that a theory based on the assumption of a common mechanism must be wrong in one way or another ; the fact that Wagner 's theory is inadequate as an account of habituation provides no reason to reject its explanation for latent inhibition .
16 This analogy leads to the ‘ decision tree ’ , a useful way of structuring the multiple problems associated with development projects so that the expected value ( EV ) criterion can be used to help decide which branch to follow .
17 This analogy leads to the ‘ decision tree ’ , a useful way of structuring the multiple problems associated with development projects so that the expected value ( EV ) criterion can be used to help decide which branch to follow .
18 This thinking led to the theory and strategy of ‘ export-led industrialization ’ ( ELI ) .
19 This reasoning leads to the prediction that , if the locus of impairment in surface dyslexia is within the visual word recognition system , the patient will sometimes confuse one homophone with another when asked to define single printed words — will say , for example , that the printed word frays means ‘ a part of a sentence ’ .
20 In an idealized three-dimensional numerical simulation of the Northern Hemisphere winter stratosphere , doubling the CO 2 concentration leads to the formation of an Arctic ozone hole comparable to that observed over Antarctica , with nearly 100% local depletion of lower-stratospheric ozone .
21 This susceptibility led to the closure of the main road at its base .
22 Out extends to breaking-point the possibilities of classical empiricist philosophy , and the ultimate failure of this philosophy leads to the full-scale paradigm shift dramatized in the novel .
23 And the way in which er these calcium activated K channels pla play a role in this response is that when these beta cells see glucose , they depolarize , and this depolarization leads to the opening of voltage dependent voltage gated calcium channels .
24 Braverman ( 1974 ) argues that scientific management and the work of individuals such as F. W. Taylor , that we looked at in an earlier chapter , encouraged the development of the control of the worker by management and that the transformation of work advocated by scientific management led to the de-skilling and to the degradation of the worker .
25 At this point in the course the consideration of recent published work leads to the invitation to the course of an eminent visiting lecturer .
26 This social tactic leads to the idea that linguistic deficit has been established empirically .
27 The resulting public outcry led to the closure of the bank in October 1991 , and to the establishment of an inquiry by the House ethics committee .
28 It was the curtain to a single French window leading to the garden and right to the side of her chair .
29 Interestingly enough , as many writers have pointed out , this process led to the positing of numerous agencies with high-sounding names purporting to do exactly what the older and rejected vocabulary of pre-behaviourist mentalism had attempted to do .
30 This process leads to the accumulation of coarse grains on the crests of ridges , from which they are not removed , as they are considerably larger than the size the wind is able to move .
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