Example sentences of "this leads [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | This leads onto the railway line . |
2 | All this leads to a state of depression — with slowness of body and mind , inability to concentrate , lassitude , hopelessness , a tendency to sleep late in the morning and doze all afternoon . |
3 | This leads to a requirement that hyperdocuments be self-contained . |
4 | They increase the level of potassium in the body and this leads to a reduction in blood pressure , say researchers at Leicester General Hospital 's University Department of Medicine For The Elderly . |
5 | This leads to a reduction of muscle tone and loss of colonic segmentation , which are associated with diarrhoea . |
6 | This leads to a trans configuration , as in . |
7 | This leads to a fall in the amount of company-specific information collected , and a decline in stock market volume . |
8 | However , there is no evidence that this leads to a delinking of spot and futures prices . |
9 | It all begins with the stagnation of the blood in capillaries ( tiny blood vessels ) , and this leads to a flow of blood fluids ( plasma ) through the capillary walls which separate fat-storing cells known as adipose cells . |
10 | This leads to a depth first backtracking search . |
11 | This leads to a sense of eternal harmony " and I knew the infusion and understanding of heavenly spiritual sounds , sounds which pertain to the song of eternal praise and to the sweetness of unheard melody " ( 15.93 ) . |
12 | I 'd like to see erm there is still in this country a reluctance on the part of erm the lower social and economic class children and families to continue in education erm This leads to a position in which , a situation in which in , in the workplace and elsewhere the educated person is still regarded as a , as a sort of rather strange and alien minority person . |
13 | So this leads to a kind of erm stratigraphic view of the mind , with the unconscious , which is everything that is permanently excluded from conscious consciousness by repression , the pre-conscious which is what is not currently conscious but is accessible to consciousness , you can recall it in other words , and the conscious is what you 're presently aware of . |
14 | This leads to a tendency to reduce the form of critique to the form of natural science which , Habermas argues , would not have happened if Marx had maintained a distinction between instrumental and communicative action . |
15 | This leads to a discussion of the characteristics of the agency labour force and of the nature of the occupation and regional labour markets in which they are found . |
16 | However , these are theoretical constructs which must be translated into an actual curriculum ; inevitably this leads to a consideration of curriculum organisation , particularly subject-based versus ‘ integrated ’ or ‘ interdisciplinary ’ approaches . |
17 | This leads to a consideration of what would encourage participation . |
18 | This leads to a system of values whose chief criterion seems to be lack of popularity ( that is , of commercial success ) , whose musical politics is governed by a continuous effort to be ‘ challenging ’ and ‘ difficult ’ so as to outwit the equally continuous capacity of the industry to exploit innovation , and whose approach to production is based on a ‘ folk spontaneity ’ model which sees ‘ real ’ music-making as arising ‘ naturally ’ , independent of the influence of existing codes , roles and practices . |
19 | This leads to a process of amplification or snowballing : individuals who are caught and labelled as criminal see themselves so and act accordingly , thus the label becomes more widely applied and firmly fixed , and the criminal becomes more attached to that label . |
20 | This leads to a neglect of conservation management … the soil conservation expert is thus requested to propose technical and educational solutions to socio-political problems , whilst the sociologist is given the task of obtaining the approval of the population for measures taken without its advice and real consent . |
21 | For example , a Third World producer might win the battle to process a mineral or an industrial crop on site , but if this leads to a crisis in foreign currency because the machinery and the technology necessary for the task have to be imported , then it may eventually result in greater dependence . |
22 | This leads to a disorder of mood . |
23 | this leads to a disorder of mood . |
24 | This leads to a characterization of ideology : |
25 | This leads to a series of return maps , for r-values like those shown in Fig. 6.5b . |
26 | This leads to a concentration on politically symbolic items . |
27 | It must be the theoretical aspects of a subject that are employed to encourage free , imaginative thought , speculation , and the conceptual connections between one subject and another , even if in some cases this leads to a breakdown of the divisions between traditional ‘ subjects ’ . |
28 | All this leads to a distortion in academic life . |
29 | This leads to a number of possible confusions . |
30 | This leads to an increase in ammonia and nitrite levels for a short time ; but this can be reduced by using two smaller-than-normal filters and washing them ( in water change tank water ) at alternative two weekly intervals maintaining one at full capacity at all times . |