Example sentences of "[pron] leads [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Particular attention was drawn to the small tunnel at Curiemuirend which leads under the Walkway to the bridge over the river to Westmill which is , at present , virtually impassable . |
2 | Particular attention was drawn to the small tunnel at Curiemuirend which leads under the Walkway to the bridge over the river to Westmill which is , at present , virtually impassable . |
3 | Off Whitstable , Glisseuse changed course and made for the Swale channel which leads between the Isle of Sheppey and the main Kent coast , a popular short cut into the Medway for small craft when the tide is right . |
4 | There is a pleasant reception area with easy chairs , which leads into the bar . |
5 | A curiously named farm at the eastern end of the parish , adjacent to the waterway which leads into the river Hull , is Corps Landing , the legend being that corpses were landed here for interment , but this can not be proved . |
6 | As he leaves , via the door which leads into the wardrobe department instead of the corridor , you hear him saying to two puzzled coat hangers : ) ‘ Hang on . |
7 | Just behind the car a small gap in the curtains reveals a door which leads into the motel apartment . |
8 | After a brief examination , it became evident that the lady 's pain was coming from her right kidney , and as it was in waves , or ‘ colicky ’ , my aunt was led to believe it was from the renal vein — which leads into the kidney — and as this organ felt hard , a conclusion was reached that our patient probably had a kidney-stone blocking the hollow vein . |
9 | The move which the program chooses is the one which leads to a position HisPos with maximum backed up value . |
10 | ‘ New Courses ’ comprise combinations of units either developed nationally or locally to create a new course , i.e. one which leads to a qualification which is substantially different from existing provision but which meets a defined local or national need . |
11 | However , if the assumption of growth is removed , then there is a change in the experience of those involved in the process which leads to a change in expectations . |
12 | The above joint degree courses lead to a BSc , apart from Computer Science and Electronics which leads to a BEng . |
13 | It could be the moment when , after years of tedious work , he obtains the result which leads to a flash of inspiration , a breakthrough to new knowledge , a glimpse into the future . |
14 | It is this extra spending ( or increase in aggregate demand ) which leads to a rise in the price level . |
15 | In the latter , a rise in money supply leads to a fall in the exchange rate , which leads to a rise in exports and a fall in imports . |
16 | Perhaps the most important factor which leads to a weakening of self-assertion is an authoritarian atmosphere in family and society , where self-assertion is equated with disobedience , attack , sin . |
17 | Althusser has all along promised an escape through scientific practice , an escape that may be brief and ineffective in itself but which leads to a transformation of other practices — especially political practice . |
18 | With any protectionism , right , when you , when you , when you protect something that you 're doing , you 're erm , you 're introducing a distortion a distortion in the system which leads to a misallocation of resources alright . |
19 | Over the next two-and-a-half weeks , the pair will contest a 10-game match in the penultimate stage of the World Chess Championship cycle which leads to a contest for the title itself in August 1993 against Garry Kasparov in Los Angeles . |
20 | As a result low frequency transmission is unaffected by this process ; however , during high-frequency transmission there is considerably less GABA released per impulse which leads to a shift in the balance of excitation and inhibition . |
21 | Cross the road and take the obvious lane on the other side which leads to a farm and the prominent Arnside Tower dating from the 14th century on the hillside above . |
22 | The third stage , which leads to a review of effectiveness , is a new stage that is becoming increasingly demanded . |
23 | When a choice of branching variable is necessary we can choose the variable which leads to a node having the largest assigned value . |
24 | For example : ‘ May I have an appointment with Mr Block at 4 p.m. on Monday next for a short back and sides ? ’ is preferable to : ‘ I want an appointment please , ’ which leads to a string of questions , ‘ Which day ? ’ |
25 | Their appearance is connected with anharmonicity , which leads to a breakdown of the selection rules derived assuming simple harmonic motion . |
26 | The American writer Leslie Farber has a great deal to say about ‘ the life of suicide ’ , which he insists , ‘ must not be seen as the situation or state of mind which leads to the act , but that situation in which the act-as-possibility , quite apart from whether it eventually occurs or not , has a life of its own . ’ |
27 | A much more satisfying treatment of the data uses the double extrapolation method proposed by Zimm , which leads to the shape independent parameter . |
28 | A further important control is the intensity of leaching , the downward movement of water through the weathering zone which leads to the removal of soluble products . |
29 | From here descend south following a thin path to Troutbeck Park Farm , then take the farm access road south which leads to the village of Troutbeck ( 4.5 miles ) . |
30 | The first phase is an overview which leads to the identification of the major things of interest in that area . |