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

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1 A dynastic struggle conducted under the hovering threat of Turkish occupation eventually led to Ferdinand of Habsburg gaining the throne , but his effective authority existed over only a fragment of Hungary and Croatia-Slavonia .
2 On the other hand , his determination to win became such that he frequently appeared to condone his fast men bowling in an intimidating fashion , which obviously led to criticism from press and public .
3 The attempt to do so leads to abstraction in which societies , or systems , seem to behave without any reference to actual people .
4 Wilkinson illustrates his conclusion by suggesting that a comparison of the optical company and the plating company displays the folly of the notion that de-skilling and increased management control over production processes necessarily leads to increases in efficiency .
5 Ride along with it as philosophically as you can , and try not to take your own hurt feelings or sense of irritation out on your mother-in-law , as this will only lead to unhappiness for you all .
6 It said that further technical measures of this kind will only lead to increases in carbon dioxide emissions .
7 In other words , Bukharin completely forgot that the extended reproduction … must not only lead to growth of c and v but also to that of α , i.e. to the growth of the individual consumption of the capitalists .
8 Properly used , it seems to me that quantitative methods can only lead to advances in our subject .
9 The right way to indicate its nature is , therefore , to give instances where it is present , and to describe its interaction with other parts of the system to which it belongs , in particular when the interaction leads to predictions which can be checked ; simple as the system may be , we shall find that successive interactions can swiftly lead to structures of quite satisfying complexity ( see Appendix B ) .
10 These differences in motivation would naturally lead to differences in formulations of objectives by the various groups .
11 The differences in approach of Soviet officials and Latin Americans had , by the time of the Sixth Congress , already led to tensions between Latin American Communists and their Soviet mentors .
12 This soon led to criticism of the excessive power of the Chancellor : ‘ The Chancellor 's position has become so strong that his opponents and supporters alike complain about his authoritarian style of leadership [ writing about Adenauer ] …
13 The close agreement between the teams ' assessment diagnoses and those made by formal psychiatric review is reassuring , in that the multidisciplinary approach to initial assessment seems not to lead to misdiagnosis of patients .
14 Their bones may become fragile and break more easily leading to fractures of wrists , hips and bones in the spine .
15 Their bones become fragile and break more easily leading to fractures of wrists , hips and bones the spine .
16 Essentially they retained the belief that nursery education should be free ( even if that meant there was little of it ) and that to charge for nursery classes would be the thin end of the wedge , soon leading to charges for ordinary schooling .
17 It could only too easily lead to acquiescence in the evil done by the powers of this world .
18 As the hon. and learned Member for Burton said , that reversal could easily lead to miscarriages of justice that we could sort out now .
19 If such mutations should occur in the CAG cluster of the N-Oct 3 gene it might easily lead to loss of function by aberrantly expanding the bona fide transcription activation domain , or to loss of DNA-binding if a frame shift is introduced .
20 The unpredictability of death can easily lead to embarrassment for the firm , not least because of the fundamental obligation of the personal representatives of a deceased partner to realise the assets comprised in his estate at an early date : and one of these assets will be the deceased 's share in the surplus assets of the firm or ( where the agreement so provides ) the right to be paid out for the value of that share .
21 Confusion between the sources of faunal diversity could easily lead to mistakes in interpreting its meaning .
22 ‘ Difference ’ for the Piaroa always signifies a danger : it can easily lead to violence between individuals and therefore be a deterrent to the possibility of creating the sociality necessary for the creation of community .
23 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 ) .
24 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 .
25 I am not suggesting that the differences in the foundations do not lead to differences in practice .
26 ‘ Rules applied by each member state in respect of fishing in the maritime waters coming under its sovereignty or within its jurisdiction shall not lead to differences in treatment of other member states .
27 We must ensure that the gap does not lead to anxiety about possible eviction .
28 Third , Rawls ' conception of the person does not lead to unanimity of moral views .
29 Party control over the army , KGB , state administration , economic management and other public institutions and professional groups that staff them does not lead to unity of interest among them ( Hirszowicz 1976 , p. 270 ) .
30 Thus you and the employee may jointly search for standards which are mutually acceptable which do not lead to hours of argument about whether or not they have been achieved .
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