Example sentences of "[pers pn] become part of the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Basically we become part of the strategic planning process of the company , ’ Carroll said .
2 They became part of the symbolic political language through which the riots were understood by policy makers and by popular opinion .
3 This highlights another paradox of Soviet experience — the fact that the main elements of the growing economic crisis were known to Soviet officials and Western specialists long before they became part of the public political agenda on either side of the iron curtain .
4 Around the mid sixth century the Greek cities of Asia Minor had come under the control of Croesus of Lydia , and when he fell to Cyrus of Persia in 546 they became part of the huge Persian empire .
5 Then suddenly they became part of the social background like film stars or professional football players .
6 To do so will not , of course , make any of the problems go away ; what it will do , however , is to shift the emphasis of our work so that the problems no longer undermine its effectiveness , indeed they become part of the raw material of our work .
7 ‘ But if they become part of the post-1994 set up , clever non-producers will join the company that pays the best price — and could jump from company to company on a regular basis , ’ forecast Nestle 's chief milk buyer , John Ross .
8 During this period , Aleppo 's status changed dramatically ; from being a major trade centre and quasi-independent Ottoman provincial capital , it became part of the new Syrian state and subordinate to the capital Damascus .
9 But when county boundaries were reorganised in nineteen seventy four it became part of the new county of avon .
10 This Fire Brigade was to continue as a Local Volunteer Force until the 1939–45 war when it became part of the National Fire Service .
11 It became part of the Royal Train in 1966 .
12 As a cardinal deacon , he became part of the papal " civil " service , acting on occasion as auditor of lawsuits and witnessing administrative acts of the curia .
13 The analysis will show how ‘ new ’ scientific knowledge is defined and constructed as it becomes part of the wider public discourse of the press , and it will contribute to an understanding of the role of the press as a source for public understanding of science .
14 It becomes part of the daily routine , like brushing your teeth .
15 In Western philosophy , when knowledge or theory comprehends the other , then the alterity of the latter vanishes as it becomes part of the same .
16 Unlike vector graphics , the image is a single layer , so once something is painted , it becomes part of the whole picture .
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