Example sentences of "lead us [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Our very success is leading us into a dangerous future … |
2 | Holland thus leads us to a dynamic and important role of reading : ‘ The psychoanalytic theory of literature holds that the writer expresses and disguises childhood fantasies . |
3 | This leads us to a fundamental distinction in the character of critical judgements , a distinction between what I shall call internal and external criteria of judgement . |
4 | His devotional works are full of joy ; religion , he said , ‘ leads us to a huge felicity through pleasant ways ’ . |
5 | This leads us to a brief discussion of the developments within these fields since the time when the early sociologists were working . |
6 | That finding leads us to a shocking conclusion : a gesture is more individual than an individual . |
7 | Instead of letting our success lead us into a fat-cat mentality , it led us much more strongly and much faster into a mentality of asking what are we going to do with it . |
8 | Second , these principles should then lead us on a successful search for phenomena that we had not observed previously . |
9 | I think that there is a good chance that the study of the early universe and the requirements of mathematical consistency will lead us to a complete unified theory within the lifetime of some of us who are around today , always presuming we do n't blow ourselves up first . |
10 | Occasional cairns led us to a challenging rocky descent into another forest , full of rhododendron blossom , pine scents and birdsong . |
11 | The cave itself was surprisingly warm and we realised we were walking through a gallery which led us into a lofty underground cavern . |
12 | He led us up a steep track until we were 1,000 feet above the long Lochranza inlet . |
13 | However , the excesses of ‘ pop socio-biology ’ should not , as Carrithers points out ( in this volume ) , lead us to a wholesale rejection of the evidence for certain genetically transmitted predispositions in the human animal . |
14 | These several glosses of the characterization of a causal circumstance as making its effect happen and explaining it , glosses which are surely very natural , lead us to a firm conclusion , one that may be anticipated . |