Example sentences of "she became [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 She seems to have been a stern mother ( she was always a deeply reserved woman ) who mellowed when she became a grandmother .
2 After her arrest , she told police why she became a call girl .
3 Accepted as Chinese , she became a superstar appearing in China and abroad .
4 In 1874 she became a lecturer in education , hygiene , and physiology , and vice-principal at the Bishop Otter College in Chichester .
5 Valerie taught languages in schools until 1964 when she became a Lecturer in the Department of Education at Keele University .
6 During World War I she became a home nurse and was awarded the Red Cross gold medal .
7 ‘ So she became a writer in English , but without Englishness presumably ? ’ asked my friend when we met again .
8 When she became a widow , everything changed .
9 Isobel Thompson had been a missionary in West Africa for seventeen years before she became a deacon .
10 ‘ She was a happy-go-lucky girl but she became a bulimia victim .
11 She became a comic because ‘ I could n't act ’ .
12 She became a pilot and now flies jumbo jets between Bali , Hawaii and Los Angeles .
13 In the early Fifties she decided to branch out on her own ; she moved west and drove with her two children across America to Los Angeles , where she became a secretary in an aircraft factory and later a fashion buyer at J.C .
14 After time off to have children , she became a secretary at Kendall Primary School , Colchester , where she stayed for five years before moving at Myland .
15 In my opinion it is not necessary in the present case to consider whether the unborn child was a person in law or at which stage she became a person .
16 As she became a phenomenon across the world Kylie and her organisation also began looking at sponsorship and allowing the star 's image to be associated with High Street products .
17 Active involvement in the League of Nations Union followed World War I. She became a member of its executive in 1928 and vice-chairman in 1939 .
18 She became a member of the non-militant wing of the women 's suffrage movement , the Fabian Society , and the Women 's Labour League .
19 She became a member of the advisory committee of London magistrates , and editor of Labour Woman .
20 She became a member of the Salvation Army Students ' Fellowship and was soon fully involved in university life .
21 When they reached the shearers ' quarters she became a bundle of activity , doing all she could to assist Matt in setting up the large barbecue , and then searching for dry wood to boil the water for the billy tea .
22 But Margaret laughed at him , and when she heard about a new God who sacrificed only himself , and gave bread and sweet wine to the people , she became a Christian .
23 Before she became a Christian she was active in politics and her prospects in that field were good .
24 It was the unfortunate Bishop of Norwich , hereinafter referred to as The Bloody Bishop , to quote Her Royal Highness , who had trouble grasping how quietly she became a hospice star .
25 In many ways she became a symbol of the White Revolution during the sixties .
26 In 1862 she became a Nightingale probationer at St Thomas 's Hospital , London .
27 Taught by her father ( a native of the Donegal Gaeltacht ) and guided by Monaghan singer Oliver Mulligan , she became a doyenne of the London Irish music scene .
28 She became a voice speaking out from the shadows .
29 She was educated at home until the age of twelve , when she became a day-boarder at Strathallan House , London , until the age of sixteen .
30 In March 1886 she became a columnist for the Illustrated London News , writing the Ladies ' Notes , a post which she held until 1918 .
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