Example sentences of "[adv] led to [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They argued that existing maps and digitized files from them are unable to meet these needs at global or regional scale and only remote sensing could help in the short term : the availability of stereometric data from the French SPOT satellite has already led to proposals for automated creation of global digital elevation models with a spatial ( XY ) resolution of about 30 m ( Muller 1989 ) .
2 The expected shortfall in social services funding for community care had already led to tightening of the criteria that social workers will use to decide who is eligible for care management , and patients with moderate needs for care might lose out altogether .
3 This has repeatedly led to clashes over such questions as differentials , with ASLEF attempting to protect the elite status of its members .
4 Local autonomy has also led to variety in the way in which the education system is organised within each LEA .
5 They have also led to improvements in the managerial skills of staff in these organisations .
6 Not only are there fewer titles published today but the process of decline has also led to monopolies within large cities .
7 Recent financial scandals involving the use of tax havens have also led to calls for anti-tax haven legislation .
8 The challenge of the emerging technologies and new media has also led to publishers in Germany setting up a new working group on electronic publishing , the Verleger-Arbeitskreis Elektronisches Publizieren .
9 Major changes in organizations in the last 20 years have often led to dissonance over expectations .
10 Inevitably oversimplifying , I would summarize what I have tried to say by suggesting that the schooling of science has produced three kinds of people , whose interrelations have up till now led to opposition to any attempts to realize the emancipatory potential Carlile saw .
11 The use of filamentous bacteriophage has even led to strategies for building antibodies in bacteria and improving their binding affinities , and so by-passing immunisation 4,5 .
12 Moreover , as these demands have grown , so have the commercial pressures on companies to present their results and state of affairs in the best light , and this in turn has sometimes led to difficulties for auditors in standing up to directors who fix their remuneration and who , in practice , have the power to dismiss them .
13 This has sometimes led to disputes between religious and secular clergy , between orders and bishops .
14 He has scented higher things — England ‘ B ’ v Pakistan and 12th man for the real McCoy against India , both in 1982 , his first full season — and if the aroma has never led to mouthfuls of fame ( due in part to a perceived shortage of confidence against high pace in his formative years ) he has been a staunch servant through thick and thin .
15 John Paris , in his biography of Davy published in 1825 , wrote : ‘ I have been able to present to the world a complete history of those proceedings which have so happily led to discovery of which it is not too much to say that it is at once the pride of science , the triumph of humanity and the glory of the age in which we live . ’
  Next page