Example sentences of "[vb mod] lead [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Open records should lead to better record keeping in the primary sector and will give further support to the general practice of consulting parents early about learning or behavioural problems . |
2 | The project should lead to increasing awareness across disciplines of techniques that have found many successful applications in the physical sciences . |
3 | But there have been warnings against this — both from black parents and from the conservative popular press — and these are helping teachers to re-evaluate multicultural education and to consider much more fully why it is of benefit for all children and should lead to increased achievement and awareness amongst our pupils . |
4 | The idea is that the standards should lead to increased uptime for users , and are also intended to aid computer and network operating system companies and hardware vendors that implement the standards , as well as those that use system management applications . |
5 | The resulting devices will be used with Intel 's 80960 Cx series of superscalar microprocessors to provide a complete building block chip set to reduce chip count by integrating most of the logic functions surrounding the CPU , which should lead to increased reliability and performance , and reduced board space requirements and cost . |
6 | The employers will tell you that environmental auditing is solely a management tool , but , B S seven seven five O , and the Euro Community regulations , should lead to increased employee and T U involvement . |
7 | On the other hand , Bottoms sees the central power of the British state as having become more absolute in recent years , which part two of law one says should lead to harsher punishment . |
8 | A second example of the importance of giving opportunities to other people comes from the type of head who , in pursuing the argument that good management of a school should lead to good learning by the child , watches pupils for signs that they do in some way match hopes about independence of mind , wholeness and honesty . |
9 | The NUWSS on the other hand warned that though the bill deserved general support , the clauses extending police powers needed careful monitoring , ‘ lest they should lead to further harrying of the unfortunate women ’ . |
10 | Through a series of in-hour seminars and persistent marketing effort , we are securing good quality leads , which should lead to further growth in 1993 . |
11 | High market growth , if taken to be an indicator of an early stage in a life-cycle ( or a break-point upwards in a revitalized mature-stage life-cycle ; see Gilbert and Strebel , 1988 ) , coupled with high market share should lead to high ROI if the appropriate investment is undertaken . |
12 | ‘ It is ironic that the Council 's projects , most of them in one way or another emphasizing the value of local initiative , teacher involvement , school-level decision-making and various innovations in pedagogy such as inter-disciplinary teaching , should lead to heightened activity nationally to control the curriculum . ’ |
13 | The second factor is important because it should lead to improved productivity of application developers , as it is no longer necessary for them to know diverse languages , environments and command sequences . |
14 | The service is claimed to use voice techniques that are significantly less compressed than those of competing offerings , which should lead to enhanced transmission quality . |
15 | Field studies suggest that there is a yield benefit , too , as reduced tractor wheelslip and soil compaction should lead to less damage to soil and crop . |
16 | It should lead to more understanding of language diversity , including multilingualism , and be closely related to pupils ' experience in their own communities , and therefore be treated with great sensitivity to pupils ' home backgrounds . |
17 | This must lead to some confusion in the perception of self for both girls and boys . |
18 | We think that 'll lead to fairer fining , and I think that 's right , and I welcome what 's going on in north Oxfordshire ; it follows four experiments that the Home Office has had in other parts of the country . |
19 | On the other hand , our log-power estimates have only approximately a gaussian distribution , and this might lead to incorrect calculation of the likelihood of local peaks . |
20 | Any organisms that might lead to increased release of carbon dioxide , or methane , are clearly not to be welcomed in a world that is currently experiencing warming due to the enhanced greenhouse effect . |
21 | So transfer of germs to the vagina does happen — and it 's possible those germs might lead to vaginal discharge . |
22 | They remark that this ‘ might lead to all rape cases being regarded less seriously . ’ |
23 | On the other hand the Security Council may investigate ‘ any dispute ’ which might lead to international friction , not merely those between member States , and any member State may bring such a situation or dispute to its attention . |
24 | Talk was of a minor disciplinary measure by management that might lead to industrial action . |
25 | Whether and how that might lead to radical change of practice was another issue . |
26 | There was increased military representation , reflecting the leadership 's concern that economic reforms might lead to civil unrest . |
27 | Now in his late 40s , Mr Rees told the meeting of about 150 Samaritans that transsexualism , if untreated , might lead to mental illness . |
28 | In the aftermath of the Police Strike , senior officers were doubly concerned to prevent the kind of rank-and-file interaction that might lead to common cause against their superiors . |
29 | Ascertainment bias might lead to earlier detection of cancer in regularly supervised patients , but against this as a factor in our case the survival times in cancer patients and the frequency of incident and fatal cancers were not different in clinic patients and controls ( figs 1 and 2 ; table II ) . |
30 | Flow charts are a useful record of a process but are not particularly suited as a basis for analysis which might lead to improved job design or training . |