Example sentences of "always [been] [verb] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Skill in analysing and assessing problems and needs has not always been matched by sufficient , sufficiently varied , or sufficiently effective ways of responding . |
2 | This was the evidence which Marx and Engels required in order to show that society has not always been based on private property held by isolated nuclear families . |
3 | The WYSIWYG that word processors offer has always been based around monospaced fonts because that is all that the computer and printer have been able to cope with . |
4 | She 's always been trained on classical principles , and we 've proved you can train anything that way . |
5 | ‘ I 've always been fascinated by other cultures , traditions and people , particularly those removed from the Western World . ’ |
6 | ‘ I 've always been fascinated by other cultures , traditions and people , particularly those removed from the Western World . ’ |
7 | I 've always been fascinated by British history . |
8 | Ideals have always been developed over long periods of time as the result of historical evolutions and through exceptional personalities . |
9 | However , the statistical picture remains somewhat unclear for two main reasons : the data have not always been analysed with sufficient attention to all the possible factors implicated in such over-representation ; there are insufficient provincial data to show how general are the London results . |
10 | That people have been f***** up and it 's always been done with express permission from the Catholic Church . ’ |
11 | Freight and parcels had always been seen as distinct entities , and these naturally formed two of the new sectors . |
12 | We have always had a middle range approach ( in Merton 's sense ) at — though we have always been weighted to social institutions and the applied end . |
13 | Horticultural publication has always been treated with low priority compared to taxonomic research at RBGE . |
14 | Criticism has not always been related to specific cases . |
15 | They all came down and used to come in our rooms and all sorts of other and I met some very ni and of course , all nationalities , you see and no matter what they were , well of course Cambridge has always been noted for different nationalities , has n't it ? |
16 | Bathed in the bright sun of Italy and glittering with social and commercial success , it seemed to her that it had always been menaced by dark shadows , many of which , Constance sometimes thought , had sprung up almost to punish her for leaving this remote area so early in her adult life . |
17 | Somewhat interestingly , no exact passenger figures were detailed in the 1991 DVR report and accounts although this has always been shown in previous years . |
18 | But the court has not always been held in breathless reverence . |
19 | Among these colour and texture have been of prime importance , but durability has always been valued in civilized societies concerned with maintaining wealth . |
20 | My wife and I have travelled P & O from Dover to Oostende and Dover to Zeebrugge many times in the past and we have always been issued with separate tickets . |
21 | For the Japanese no such decision was necessary because their home market had always been used to small cars . |
22 | The big decisions thrown up by PESC have always been taken by full Cabinet , though Macmillan set a precedent followed by future prime ministers when he established in autumn 1960 a small Ministerial Action Group on Public Expenditure , known as ‘ Magpie ’ . |
23 | However , while the theoretical analyses yield precise predictions , these have not always been found in empirical analysis . |
24 | The tradition of St Melangell was never forgotten and the little room at the east end , despite being rebuilt in the 18th century , has always been known as Cell-y-bedd ( the room of the grave ) . |
25 | they , they 've always been known for marvellous skin have n't they , the erm |
26 | Mexicans have always been known for heavy drinking because traditional forms of alcohol are cheap , peasants often making their own , and this is a classic way of forgetting the drudgery of poverty . |
27 | Her father 's stern presence had prevented such scenes of gay ebullience , but the weary harvesters had always been welcomed with heartfelt gratitude and hospitality into her mother 's kitchen , where the tables groaned with an array of fare equally good as that now placed before the workers of Thorsbury . |