Example sentences of "have become a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Those are the words of Rose Laird , a pioneer in skincare who has become a legend in the beauty industry . |
2 | The objective of the Lausanne conference should be to encourage Kenya and its allies to emulate the conditions pertaining in the Kruger and Hwange national parks , where culling has become a necessity born out of successful conservation , rather than to encourage policies which could turn them into the run-down disaster zones Mr Leakey described . |
3 | Rescheduling of such debts has become a necessity for the private banks , and a practice which has emerged is that new agreements have been made conditional on such countries accepting the stringent programmes of the IMF which are intended to promote effective adjustment of a country 's balance of payments and ensure that the use of Fund resources is temporary . |
4 | He says : ‘ We are making more and more DCDs — Driver Controlled Deliveries — where the driver not only delivers a tanker of petrol to a filling station , but is trained to unload it into the underground storage tanks ’ This has become a necessity , as more and more petrol stations are operated by one person locked behind security windows . |
5 | And Sandra has become a style icon , for the fashion world particularly . |
6 | To post-war generations , the deli has become a way to stay connected , through the taste buds with their roots . |
7 | It is a cliche to say that it has become a way of life , and that the stone-throwing is only the public , propaganda face of a whole political , social , economic and psychological transformation — the Palestinians ' own perestroika — which both sustains the Intifada and lays the groundwork for the eventual transition to statehood . |
8 | However , the shame is that for some health service insiders it has become a way of life . |
9 | It has become a way of life for you . |
10 | ‘ It has become a way of life for me here — but it must be unsettling to the players . |
11 | ‘ I have been leading scorer at Boro for five out of the last seven seasons — but it has become a way of life to be talked about as the player who is leaving or out of the team . |
12 | 1985 : The BPI admit that home-taping has become a way of life and produces a booklet that estimates some 466 million hours of music were taped in the home during 1983 alone . |
13 | In most of the prisons , corruption has become a way of life and inmates believe that without taking recourse to corrupt practices they can not cope with the culture that prevails . |
14 | I do n't know which is most unlikely , but after studying in Louisiana , and spending a ghastly summer and a magical Christmas in New York , I have been savagely bitten by the travel bug , while writing the novel has become a way of life . ’ |
15 | Barter has become a way of life . |
16 | In recent days that particular visualization has become a bit more sophisticated . |
17 | These cases are an indication of the liberal attitude currently being taken by the courts , which have obviously recognised that the old saying that a security on a dwelling is ‘ as safe as houses ’ has become a bit of a mockery . |
18 | It has become a bit tiresome of late . |
19 | The series has become a bit of a cult in the UK , with Victor becoming much better known than the actor who plays him , Richard Wilson . |
20 | Mind you he has become a bit of an opinionated arsehole recently … more like Jonathan King , or Nina Myskow — y'know being deliberately contentious to get people to write in . |
21 | 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 . |
22 | For the second , public ownership has become a question to be settled on the merits of the particular case . |
23 | The old party leader with the enigmatic smile is 67 and has become a person of greater symbolic significance than of real political potential . |
24 | The old party leader with the enigmatic smile is 67 and has become a person of greater symbolic significance than of real political potential . |
25 | Now it has become a scene of misery and discontent . |
26 | ‘ Most people already think it has become a farce . ’ |
27 | The aristocratic house has become a mausoleum of sad secrets . |
28 | More commonly , the minister under attack is shielded by collective responsibility and the decision as to whether he or she goes or stays is one for the Prime Minister , based on the criteria of the extent to which he or she has become a liability to the government . |
29 | By harvest time the grain has become a mass of spores , which spread as a cloud of dust . |
30 | After a string of commercial flops , Richard Gere has become a superstar once more with his starring role in PRETTY WOMAN , a contemporary updating of Pygmalion which enjoyed massive success in the US . |