Example sentences of "[pers pn] was appoint [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Well , towards the end of 1990 I was appointed artist in residence at the Tate Gallery in Liverpool .
2 So the challenge to keep abreast of technological developments in aviation was one I entered into with considerable enthusiasm when I was appointed Deputy Chief Inspector in 1967 .
3 In the latter part of 1943 I was appointed Archdeacon of Rangoon , in which capacity I was enabled to visit groups of Anglo-Burman Anglicans and others who had settled in various Indian centres .
4 Returning to our work Sid and I became more and more closely connected with Radio Station 1OAB and during the Annual General Meeting of the association that year I was appointed Programme Director .
5 And er it developed from there that er I was appointed collector at collecting the money and er
6 They moved in during September 1950 and just about that time Ninette de Valois announced that she was appointing John resident choreographer of Sadler 's Wells Theatre Ballet for the following season .
7 In 1885 she was appointed lecturer in psychology at Westfield College , London .
8 When she was appointed Commissioner , second in rank to the General , in July , 1979 , someone left a gardenia , her favourite flower , on her seat at the thanksgiving service .
9 She was appointed OBE ( 1949 ) and DBE ( 1965 ) .
10 A member of the first Dáil Éireann , 21 January 1919 , she was appointed minister for labour .
11 She was appointed DBE in 1960 and made a life peer as Baroness Brooke of Ystradfellte in 1964 .
12 She was appointed DBE in 1924 .
13 In 1889 she was appointed demonstrator in botany at Newnham College , and along with her colleague Marion Greenwood she organized the Balfour laboratory , whose direction she took over in 1899 .
14 She was appointed CBE in 1965 .
15 She was appointed CBE in 1918 and DBE in 1921 .
16 When she retired in 1930 , having served the School devotedly for its first twelve years , she was appointed CBE , and was awarded the silver medal of the African Society .
17 She was appointed CBE in 1946 and DBE in 1952 .
18 that it came as no surprise that after six busy years with the Association she was appointed Deputy Head Teacher of the Doncaster School for the Deaf and Director of its Further Education Department .
19 In July 1990 she was appointed Personnel Assistant and in August 1990 Personnel Officer .
20 In May 1990 she was appointed Consultant on Public Health Medicine , Central Birmingham Health Authority .
21 In 1952 she was appointed secretary to the general manager working first for Trevor Haynes then Bill Proudfoot .
22 In 1975 she was appointed MBE .
23 She organized the first Red Cross women 's camp , and during World War I was commandant of a Voluntary Aid Deteachment hospital in Glamorganshire , for which she was appointed MBE .
24 In 1892 she was appointed vice-consul in Okoyong , presiding over the native court , and later ( 1905 ) vice-president of Ikot Obong native court .
25 In 1854 she was appointed teacher at the experimental Portman Hall School endowed by Barbara Leigh Smith ( later Barbara Bodichon , q.v . ) .
26 However many feathers must have been ruffled in the process Eva survived and received a further vote of confidence iii her leadership skills when she was appointed principal of Usher Institute , a girls ' school with a growing reputation , south of Howard in Matabeleland .
27 The DTI had already announced in early April that it was appointing consultants to consider the practicability of privatising AEA .
28 At the turn of the century it was appointed watchmakers to the Admiralty and in 1908 the firm was awarded the Grand Prix in the horological section of the Franco-British Exhibition in London .
29 After his return to England in 1827 he worked with his brother Henry Rome Stutchbury ( 1796–1853 ) , a dealer in natural history specimens , until in 1831 he was appointed curator of the museum of the Bristol Institution .
30 In 1823 he was appointed curator of the museum of the Bristol Institution , a post he was to hold until his death .
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