Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] led [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Its activities led to the British Film Weeks of 1924 , which involved screening a programme of British pictures , accompanied by the sort of ballyhoo which left the public , according to critic Paul Rotha , ‘ hypnotized into readiness to applaud the worst picture in the world because it was British . ’
2 Figure 3 shows that , using a linear template , a very reduced amount of transcripts was obtained when the initiating NTPs were omitted , whereas their addition led to the formation of initiated complexes that were resistant to the heparin challenge .
3 The references to professors and their books led to the predictable conclusion : ‘ On the Black issue our verdict is based on the facts , we have judged the case on the evidence , fairly , and come to the only just conclusions . ’
4 UN Special Representative , Gunnar Jarring , and the US Secretary of State , William Rogers , both made it the foundation of their peace efforts before their failure led to the October 1973 war .
5 This Nationalist co-operation and its outcome led to the loss of many SNP activists , who had known all along that Labour could not be trusted .
6 Bolton 66 was the first ‘ foreign ’ tram to operate in Blackpool in June 1982 and its success led to the arrival of cars from other systems .
7 The Flowers Committee viewed subsidence as ‘ one of the more significant impacts of deep mining ’ , and its analysis led to the establishment of the Waddilove Committee which reported in 1984 .
8 Her initiatives led to the creation in 1930 of the Townswomen 's Guilds ; the founding , with Sir Ernest Simon ( later first Baron Simon of Wythenshawe , q.v. ) , of the Association for Education in Citizenship , 1934 ; and the launching of the Children 's Minimum Committee , 1936 , to campaign for better standards of care and nutrition .
9 His enthusiasm led to the formation of a club at his school , Stokesley Primary , and this encouraged other youngsters to learn the game .
10 His work led to the celebrated equation which bears his name , an equation which can be found written down at the start of every book on quantum mechanics .
11 His work led to the formation in 1919 of the chemical engineering group of the Society of Chemical Industry .
12 A flight of granite steps to his right led to the first floor of one of the buildings and an arrow carried the word , ‘ Office ’ .
13 Double gates to his right led to the garage , a modern construction complete with first-floor flat served by an external staircase and styled to resemble the cottage itself , which lay straight ahead of him , evidently well cared-for in the absence of its owner .
14 His success led to the rapid demise of the native English tradition by 1730 , and the slender , short-scaled harpsichords were made no more .
15 But only the paternalistic tendency to minimize the significance of action based on the agent 's judgment of his situation led to the attempt to amalgamate all voluntary obligations into a generalized doctrine of duties arising out of responsibility for inducing others to act .
16 In particular , Siegel ( 1967 ) found that a close examination of his results led to the conclusion ( see also Riley 1968 ) that it was unwarranted to assume that responses learned in the first stage could not be the source of the transfer seen in the second .
17 From Kecskemet , his path led to the party headquarters in Budapest .
18 His arrest led to the severing of diplomatic relations with Norway , where Wamwere had been given refugee status and which Kenya accused of supporting subversion in Kenya .
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