Example sentences of "yet there have been [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 And yet there had been a fleeting moment , as he 'd held her tight in his arms , when she 'd found herself longing to lower her defences , to give in to the unfamiliar forces driving through her body with his touch .
2 It seems but yesterday that the Bill was given its Second Reading on 26 November , yet there has been a great deal of debate of its contents .
3 She has never advocated violence , and yet there has been a lettered campaign in some quarters to discredit her .
4 Rosenthal , who is keen to move back to the continent , has also been touted in France although as yet there has been no definite interest .
5 Yet there has been no systematic attempt to examine the current nature of teacher education , the notions of professionalism implied by different approaches , the amount of school-based work they involve , or the particular competencies they seek to engender .
6 It has been suggested that similar reactions may take place on background sulphate aerosols in the Antarctic stratosphere , but as yet there has been no unambiguous evidence for these reactions in the absence of polar stratospheric clouds ( although there have been observations of ozone loss attributed to volcanic aerosols ) .
7 As yet there has been no other attempt to describe so vividly in dance the wish of any character , but in this case a puppet , to escape from prison .
8 Fletcher ( 1990 ) has argued for the extension of cervical screening after the age of 65 years but as yet there has been no similar argument for breast cancer screening .
9 Yet there has been no formal statement from Ministers .
10 As yet there has been no detailed attempt to assess the possible effects of such hot-spot ‘ migration ’ on landscape development , but there is some evidence from the stratigraphic record of the movement of topographic swells across continents which may be related to the passage of hot spots or similar thermal phenomena .
11 In a word , governments have made themselves unpopular with their manifold ‘ failures ’ , those failures are traceable to their basic failure to restructure the social relations of British capitalism , and yet there has been no social force with the ‘ will ’ and capacity to enforce any radical restructuring against the opposition which any such move must encounter .
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