Example sentences of "lead [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 You are to discuss a proposition , offering and evaluating arguments with appropriate illustration on different sides ; the arguments should lead towards a conclusion which ( 1 ) follows the arguments you have offered , and ( 2 ) matches the balance of possibilities which you argued for in your essay .
2 CDU conservatives and the party 's right-wing Bavarian ally , the Christian Social Union ( CSU ) , have strongly opposed any changes that would lead towards a ‘ multicultural society ’ .
3 Activities that would lead towards the objective of writing a short story might be , ‘ clear the spare room out and set up a desk ’ , ‘ enrol on a weekend workshop on creative writing ’ , ‘ set aside the next four Sunday afternoons for writing ’ , ‘ arrange to visit a friend in six weeks ’ time with a completed first draft' .
4 The company is hoping that the work could also lead towards the protection of plants from pests more common in Britain , some of which show poor response to traditional pesticides .
5 One aspect of the infant 's early mentality is its belief in its own omnipotence , which may lead towards an attempt simply to deny the existence of the bad object , thus safeguarding the presence of the good object , and projecting both as idealized forms .
6 The attempt to be fair to all traditions , by being equally tolerant of all and non-judgemental , can lead like a slippery slope from well-intentioned neutrality to profound scepticism about religion .
7 A press release on the " New Democratic Era in Benin " , published on March 12 , set out the political transition programme , which would lead via a new constitution , a new electoral law and the free formation of political parties , to legislative and presidential elections in February and March 1991 .
8 It increases the pressure on volunteers and on the phone lines dramatically , because whereas any other sort of information call may take a minute or two , an AIDS call can take half an hour or more because the information may lead into a discussion of the caller 's lifestyle , moral attitudes and emotional needs .
9 This will lead into a discussion of the Nixon presidency including Watergate and the repercussions that followed , such as the widespread decline in public trust and a vigorous reassertion of congressional power .
10 Taking generalised formulations of legal theory seriously can often lead into the cul-de-sac of the unspoken assumption of that theory .
11 True , it is an altruism grounded in selfishness , but that need not bother us ( it can only lead into the usual teenage casuistry about altruism always being ultimately selfish ) .
12 The door did not lead into the shop as Wycliffe had expected but into a minute hall with the shop door on the right , and stairs leading up .
13 Reconstructivist Post Modernism which is based on a feminine way of thinking and working will lead into the 90s .
14 Proper heading , quality logo paper , hook , statistics , something which would lead into the thing , more friendly language , it was very bureaucratic , was n't it , in a sense ?
15 A celebration of the Queen 's passion for the Turf , gun dogs and racing pigeons — one imagines in that order — comes as a welcome relief and makes one hope fervently that she will one day lead in a Derby winner .
16 This optimism is keyed to the possibility that the US might lead in a field in which superiority is not a national goal .
17 There were steps from one terrace to another but Susan could not yet see where they would lead in the end .
18 It would therefore be possible for a young school-leaver to begin acquiring qualifications that could lead in the end to gaining a technical degree qualification .
19 He will certainly lead from the front and export promotion and a strong anti-monopoly stance will characterise his reign in the DTI .
20 Bareheaded , kitted in their lighter padded armour , three squads of Marine Scouts also hailed the elevated figure of Commander Pugh — who would be no distant eminence once the crusade was launched , but would lead from the forefront of the vanguard …
21 One worm should lead from the feeding compartment to one of the other compartments .
22 Team captain Linford Christie will lead from the front as he goes for an unprecedented fourth successive 100m crown , while Colin Jackson ( 110m hurdles ) and Eamonn Martin ( 10,000m ) are also selected as defending champions .
23 Disappearance of their dominance would lead to a unified Ireland or else the restructuring of a new statelet with smaller geographical boundaries in which their dominance was again reassured .
24 A bad swing can easily lead to a serious ground loop or even to cart-wheeling and a broken glider .
25 There are various contributory factors which can lead to a towplane ‘ upset ’ when towing in the normal ( high ) tow position .
26 To suggest from within the institution that these influential and powerful units of control are essentially ephemeral and arbitrary constructs , involved in very limited and narrow areas of practice , will almost certainly lead to a rejection of the account ; and the findings are more than likely to be attributed the same metaphorical rejection as the activities of the villains and criminals , as was illustrated in the response to the study undertaken by the Policy Studies Institute outlined above .
27 If your goal is a college scholarship , the odds are very high that attending one for a few years will lead to a number of scholarship offers from top-notch college tennis programmes in the United States .
28 If you do not provide the information requested for registration , this could lead to a fine of £50 in the first instance , and then £200 if you still do not comply .
29 Too much protection of young , nervous dogs can lead to a condition known as learned incompetence , whereby the dog fools the owner into always being ready to protect him .
30 Caradon also refused to comment , but has already announced that it was involved in talks which could lead to a bid .
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