Example sentences of "[Wh det] [verb] become [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | To an extent , the anger is to be expected from a newspaper which has become a strident mouthpiece of conservative elements in the Kremlin leadership . |
2 | That forecast , from party sources and from the intelligence bureau , which has become a wing of the Prime Minister 's office , was crucial in the timing of the election , at least a month before it was expected . |
3 | Now , it is Kingfisher which has become a favourite — not because the people at the helm have great shopkeeping flair but because their cautious and unflamboyant management style has created a retailing empire of solid reliability . |
4 | The Australian Federal Police are saying little about the affair , which has become a national scandal , but they have admitted the discovery of illegal bugs on the phones of Mr Robert Holmes a Court , Sydney stockbroker Mr Peter Burrows and a leading Australian financial journalist , Mr Terry McCran of the Melbourne Herald , a trenchant critic of the Bond Corporation . |
5 | Dr Ed Dart , director of research at ICI Seeds , which has become a major international organisation since it started in 1985 , plays these down . |
6 | Each work extends the ‘ augury ’ of Finnegans Wake : each work is a postmodernist paradigm , a prophecy of the self-reflexive foregrounding of language and fiction-making which has become a central , distinguishing characteristic of postmodernism . |
7 | The telephone network is now under the control and direction of British Telecom which has become a privatized monopoly . |
8 | So Herbert Chapman established a pattern in relations between directors and manager which has become a feature of many of the major clubs , where the only veto on the manager 's power is the sack if he fails to bring results . |
9 | ‘ How shall the crimes that have their direct source in the immoral motion pictures be measured ? ’ he asked , before declaring , ‘ Catholics are called by God , the pope , the Bishops and the priests to a united and vigorous campaign for the purification of the cinema , which has become a deadly menace to morals . ’ |
10 | VANDALS have tried to cut down the tree which has become a shrine to rock star Marc Bolan . |
11 | In addition , there is fanaticism and lack of religious tolerance , which has become a major human rights problem in many parts of the world . |
12 | In the middle of Reykjavik is a small lake called Lake Tjörnin which has become a centre piece to the city . |
13 | The problem of the physical and sexual abuse of children , which has become a dominant theme of family studies and of the work of the social services in the 1970s and 1980s , is increasingly seen as one that replicates itself across generations . |
14 | FAXgrabber itself has been developed by Calera Recognition Systems which has become a leader in optical character recognition ( OCR ) technology which allows computers to ‘ read ’ . |
15 | A second team is currently working at Moscow airport , which has become a major transit point for people without proper documents . |
16 | Expressed in developmental , rather than structural terms , one can describe the condition of the citizens of total welfare states as childlike , for not only are they likely to be regressed in developmental terms for the reasons already given , they are also childlike in relative terms to the state which has become a parent , and an omnipotent one at that . |
17 | Expressed in developmental , rather than structural terms , one can describe the condition of the citizens of total welfare states as childlike , for not only are they likely to be regressed in developmental terms for the reasons already given , they are also childlike in relative terms to the state which has become a parent , and an omnipotent one at that . |
18 | Some trajectories wander forever near the strange invariant set which has become a strange attractor . |
19 | As long as the controls are there to make sure they 're not wandering around all over the place which one hears about Group 4 and their reputation for letting people go which has become a bit of a joke . |
20 | SUSAN NICKALLS looks at pottery which has become a smash hit |
21 | Forms will be available shortly for the Hale 5 road race on December 20 , which has become a popular pre-Christmas outing for runners , serious and not so serious . |
22 | It 's something to do with gentlemanliness and the idea of the English gentleman , which has become a very influential one , not just in Britain , but it 's been admired and copied in many other countries and this is an historical product . |
23 | That is the large reason why she is there , with about 25 other people waiting quietly to one side of the altar in the church which has become the place in the city where freedom most nearly is . |
24 | We are looking for a couple of acres owned by the UMWA member which has become the focus of the strike : Camp Solidarity . |
25 | They were soon followed by ciprofloxacin ( 10 ) , which has become the reference substance for the modern fluoroquinolones . |
26 | Whether these libraries will become a model for the reform of a public library system which has become the plaything of politicians is another matter . |
27 | Helping to create the solid feel which has become the hallmark of Adams ' music is guitarist Keith Scott . |
28 | Yet it is this , and in particular the multi-national corporation , which has become the object of bitter criticism . |
29 | They may be piqued by the performance of fellow-American Salomon Brothers , which has become the biggest single bidder at most gilt auctions . |
30 | The triggers for Britain 's nuclear bombs were tested within their thick concrete walls and they housed the first experiments into radar.The buildings , on a remote spit of land on the Suffolk coast , may not be the oldest but they are certainly among the most historic and sinister in the ownership of the National Trust.They are on Orford Ness , a desolate wildlife haven , which has become the Trust 's latest acquisition at a cost of £3.5 million.Yesterday , in pouring rain and silence broken only by the eerie shriek of gulls , the buildings were shown to journalists for what is thought to be the first time since they were erected.Strands of barbed wire and a Ministry of Defence ‘ keep out ’ notice are now the only remaining evidence of the tight security , overseen by armed guards , which surrounded one of Britain 's most secret research establishments . |