Example sentences of "of [pos pn] [noun] become a " in BNC.

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1 As part of my training to become a breastfeeding counsellor I recently attended a Study Day on weaning , organized by NCT Rugby branch .
2 The tendency of sergeants to follow the field-worker around and to ask what she had learnt also soon dissipated as the routine demands of their job became a more pressing priority .
3 Protest strikes against living conditions included those by teachers , miners and Tirana 's transport workers , as well as a general strike in the copper mining district of Puke in support of its demand to become a free economic zone .
4 This painting is one of 6 Sandra is sending off as part of her application to become a member of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolour .
5 With such an effective way of victualling her young , the mother is able to retain them within her until they are so big that their sheer size makes them a burden and the mechanics of getting them out of her body becomes a real problem .
6 He tells us in his autobiography that this decision produced a breakdown in his wife 's health , but it was all part of his efforts to become a pure Buddhist leader and hence bring benefit to burma .
7 He also had drains that were in a terrible state and therefore wanted one of his sons to become a plumber .
8 The latter was cursed by Quintianus and as a result , so Gregory tells us , none of his descendants became a bishop .
9 The side of his face became a range of grey hills towards which she was riding , on some animal whose hoofs did not touch the ground .
10 But if Roth dissents from the statement , then imagining how he came to write most of his books becomes a problem .
11 He had found it difficult to resist the temptation to tell Patricia , at least , of his intention to become a Dominican , to go out with a bang instead of a whimper .
12 Thus Leys draws a parallel between Kenyan experience and Marx 's observation that Louis Napoleon produced , alongside the actual class structure of mid-nineteenth-century France , ‘ an artificial caste , for which the maintenance of his regime becomes a bread and butter question ’ .
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