Example sentences of "[been] taken for [art] " in BNC.

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1 I thought Lee had been taken for a ride , and said so .
2 It altered her appearance considerably , making her look older and quite severe , and in her new black working dress she could have been taken for a widow .
3 Secondly , could an outsider have walked into the Lodge quite openly on Friday night before eleven o'clock and been taken for a member by anyone who happened to come across him ? ’
4 ‘ I feel I 've been taken for a fool . ’
5 Evans sees it as an adaptation of the Egyptian dog-ape , possibly developing from the monkey frescoes in the Knossos Labyrinth ; the monkey was not native to Crete and the animal may have been taken for a monster and so given an impulse to the creation of other monsters .
6 One afternoon we had been taken for a walk up to the top of the mountain behind the camp , which had been good exercise ; from the top I had been able to see the sea .
7 Like the rest of the staff , he wore a burgundy-coloured uniform although , apart from his name tag , it could have been taken for a regular formal suit .
8 ‘ It 's not a pleasant feeling to find out you 've been taken for a ride by someone you trusted . ’
9 When she arrived at the Rectory she found that Mrs Chamberlin was out , the Rectory children had been taken for a walk by the nursemaid , the Rector had asked not to be disturbed for he had both a parish letter and acute indigestion to tackle that afternoon .
10 Oxford 's bluff worked for some time , but when by late 1713 the Jacobites finally realised they had been taken for a ride , they began to look to Bolingbroke for support .
11 They claim they 've been taken for a ride .
12 ‘ The decision has been taken for the good of Turkish football and its players , ’ a federation spokesman said .
13 copies of reports prepared for the purposes of the concentration and from which information has been taken for the purposes of the Form CO ;
14 For a confirmation of this , you only have to look at some of Turner 's paintings of the Dales and compare them with the reality to see how much poetic licence has been taken for the sake of the " phantasmagoric " .
15 Even dressed as he now was , in a blue cotton jacket and trousers , he could never have been taken for an Italian , and since he was n't able to walk — he could only hop on one leg — or speak the language , he was hardly likely to remain free for long out in the open .
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