Example sentences of "[noun pl] which [vb mod] lead " in BNC.

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1 Another person could weep and out of the weeping find memories of strengths which could lead to formulating a treatment plan and a cure .
2 In addition to stimulating the immune systems , high dose treatment causes the release of other hormones which can lead to reversible systemic organ damage .
3 Also the proportion of rods to spinelets varies to the exclusion of spinelets which would lead to confusion with O. densa were it not for the different number of arm spines , the proximal spines forming a fan and the raised oral frame .
4 In the analysis of all specific cases of agricultural technology , crucial aspects which may lead to soil erosion , can not be ‘ read off ’ in a vulgar materialist sense from the relations of production under which they are applied .
5 Employers of young engineers face a double dilemma : a declining proportion of a reducing population opting for subjects which could lead to qualifications in science , technology and engineering .
6 This coincided , however , with an increasing prevalence of the conditions and institutions which should lead us to expect the reporting and recording of offences to grow in proportion to the actual occurrence of victimization .
7 It also takes up a lot of memory for OPEN , remembering all states which might lead to a solution .
8 I have recently been involved in preliminary discussion with a private sector developer , and with British Coal , concerning two separate projects which could lead to the provision of serviced development land .
9 Two and a half years ago Camel Laird started a campaign to gain access to the intervention funding and because of the total lack of any sort of industrial policy by this government , and their refusal to support the Camel Laird application to the E E C , next month will see the closure of Camel Lairds which will lead to a loss of skills that amounts almost to a criminal act on the part of this government , who seem prepared to allow this country to become a skill-free zone in order to drive down wages and conditions to a rate comparable with some Third World countries .
10 It 's tempting to scent conspiracy — did Hoover stall investigations which might lead to the Mob , who held those compromising pictures ? — but there 's no need .
11 The purpose of the NCLE Working Party was to start investigations which could lead to such an assessment .
12 The art of search lies in choosing a short sequence of operators which will lead the search to a goal quickly .
13 At best , training may open new avenues or provide contacts which may lead to employment interviews .
14 any possible specific solvent-polymer interactions which might lead to orientation of the solvent molecules in the vicinity of the polymer chain are neglected i.e. polar solutions may be inadequately catered for by this theory ;
15 It helps capture important people interactions which could lead to bottlenecks or breakdown of the process if not managed , and is an ideal visual aid for implementation workshops currently under way at the station .
16 The planners ' survey of the 24 incoming firms established in the New Town by 1973 indicated that these had expansion plans which would lead to the creation of a further 7000 jobs by 1991 and it was anticipated that additional in comers would provide a further 3000 jobs .
17 By tacit consent both sisters behaved as if this were just like any ordinary Christmas , and they avoided discussions which might lead to the subject that was naturally uppermost in their minds .
18 OIL and gas company Blackland Oil said it was currently in discussions which may lead to a substantial acquisition .
19 And I do believe , because this region 's economy has a broader spread , that it will be the small- to medium-sized companies which will lead to economic recovery ’ .
20 Walling and Webb ( 1983 , p. 95 ) point to the need for closer cooperation between limnologists and fluvial geomorphologists which could lead to greater understanding of sediment yield .
21 Circumstances which may lead to chronic grief or clinging , for instance , included a previous ambivalent relationship with the deceased or a previous relationship in which the survivor felt either inferior or insecure .
22 disciplinary rules and procedures and the types of circumstances which can lead to suspension or dismissal ;
23 It kept her from worry and it kept her from settling down to write those applications which would lead to progress in her career of serious music .
24 Her response was to revive the tactics of earlier campaigns with chevauchées which might lead to the capture of strongpoints in northern France and put pressure on Paris itself .
25 It was depressing to discover that the warmth of Alexei 's concern was a sham , and that it had been aimed at making him susceptible to ideas which would lead to the industrialisation of Tarvaras .
26 They know how to set traps , they know how to ask you questions which will lead you into using emotive words , they will have you on tape , they will also possibly be in a position to edit that tape , and at the end of the day you can not say , ‘ I did n't say that , ’ because I have a piece of tape that says you actually did say it .
27 As well as the set OPEN of known nodes which might lead to goals , and whose children have yet to be explored , the algorithm keeps a set called CLOSED of other known nodes whose children have been constructed .
28 Given the coming demographic changes which will lead to a steep decline in the eighteen-year-old population from the later 1980s onwards and the present government 's stated intention of constraining expenditure on higher education , it is unlikely that this expansion will be maintained .
29 The third approach to prevention , and the most difficult , lies in economic and social changes which could lead to general improvements in standards of living .
30 Although the 1990 legislation was promoted as regulation with " a lighter touch " , it provides a panolpy of new punishments which may lead to regulation with an even heavier hand .
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