Example sentences of "[noun pl] [modal v] [adv] lead [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 Clear and up-to-date development plan policies should also lead to a reduction in the number of speculative applications and in the success rate of appeals against local authorities .
2 The report also examined the very real difficulties which sometimes beset home-school links , suggesting that a clash of basic objectives between teachers and parents may sometimes lead to a confrontation between widely differing models of home-school links .
3 If , for example , the alleged error relates to the construction of a term with which the courts are familiar then this will tend towards substitution of judgment , whereas more specific or technical matters will normally lead to a greater degree of discretion being granted to the agency , the legal conclusion being expressed in the form of the rational basis test .
4 But , other things being equal , such financial transfers would ultimately lead to a real transfer of resources to the recipients of expenditure .
5 ‘ Halliwell said that these sexual experiments can only lead to a dead end .
6 Secondary bonds can therefore lead to a stimulation of the crystallization process in the appropriate polymers .
7 But the work of the Spaak committee soon revealed that , even if the word ‘ supranationalism ’ was no longer used by the Six , the Messina decisions would probably lead to a loss of sovereignty to common institutions .
8 The Law Society 's rules of professional conduct do provide exemptions for this , but even so , a conveyancer should not be too quick to use those exemptions if acting for both sides might conceivably lead to a compromise or a difficult situation .
9 These factors will often lead to a testing of faith in the mid to late teenage years .
10 The possession of large machines by those responsible for managing rivers can sometimes lead to a situation where the tail wags the dog , and the results can be damaging to both the environment and the economy .
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