Example sentences of "[art] [noun] have become a [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The origin of the Swastika has become a source of speculation for western researchers throughout time . |
2 | The parliament has become a garrison . |
3 | But Brightness has become a money-spinner ; the Russians have become capitalists ; and the Beluga has become a pawn in an international game . |
4 | The villanelle had become a triolet briefly , with Tim at TCT , before Bob at Binary had him rethink it as a rondeau . |
5 | Like the video recorder and the pocket calculator , the PC has become a commodity item . |
6 | Third … the budget has become a vehicle for reducing inequalities … |
7 | The college had become a body concerned with the formulation and execution of foreign policy and nothing else . |
8 | Or I might suspect too much vehemence in his insistence that he loves gibbons , and suggest that he is deceiving himself , that visiting the animals has become a habit without much joy in it . |
9 | None of what he found now seems novel but that is , perhaps , because the study has become a classic . |
10 | Throughout the 1980s the North-East has become a magnet for new investment . |
11 | The seal has become a medusa , a jellyfish . |
12 | First there is the fact that when the work has become a commodity , produced to be sold at a profit , the internal calculations of any such market production lead directly to new forms of cultural control and especially cultural selection . |
13 | By the time he 'd reached 70th Street the sleet had become a drizzle , and there was a spring in his step . |
14 | In Britain today the Devon has become a beef breed . |
15 | The girl has become a woman . ’ |
16 | ‘ The run has become a source of motivation for some , but I do n't think Celtic need that kind of incentive , ’ Smith observed . |
17 | The central road between the gardens had become a parade ground . |
18 | For some , it seems , maintaining parity within the ERM has become a test of virility . |
19 | For the playground has become a fashion showpiece for the province 's trendy teens and juniors . |
20 | The check had become a matter of necessity rather than of choice . |
21 | The underclass has become a semipermanent rather than a generational phenomenon . |
22 | The drift had become a tunnel of overgrowth that dripped water on to the roof of the van . |
23 | ‘ Charles 's problem has been that he married a 19-year-old inexperienced girl who over the years has become a world figure , the most famous woman on the planet . |
24 | The room had become a grotto savaged by a storm , inhabited by a monster , its walls and floor and ceiling punctuated with distorted stalactites and oddly coloured fungi and treacherous moss . |
25 | We forgot that the castle was now a German headquarters and that the orphanage had become a school for officer cadets of the resurgent Fascist Party . |
26 | The funeral had become a coronation . |
27 | The two sisters had converted the stables attached to their home , Miller 's House in Lewes , into a studio which during the war had become a kind of arts centre , where exhibitions , lectures and concerts were held and which received support and encouragement from eminent names . |
28 | Last night a spokeswoman for the Arts Centre said the festival has become a victim of its own success . |
29 | Last night a spokeswoman for the Arts Centre said the festival has become a victim of its own success . |
30 | By the early 1950s the saw milling business had moved elsewhere and the site had become a scrapyard , a sad and unsightly end to a long and varied career . |