Example sentences of "[subord] a newly [verb] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | This will not usually be a concern where a newly formed company acquires Target containing capital losses , as on a buy-out . |
2 | It was not in fact until a newly legalised Solidarity had been successful at the polls and formed a majority administration in 1989 that the making of public policy began again to command at least a minimum of public acceptability . |
3 | In 1850 , as a newly appointed house surgeon to St George 's Hospital ( where he later became lecturer in anatomy ) he presented a paper to the Royal Society ‘ On the development of the optic and auditory nerves ’ . |
4 | I was , as a newly arrived curate , somewhat taken aback and went home to lick my wounds . |
5 | He seemed as tense as a newly released convict , and that tension was reflected in the percussive piano style with which he treated the opening up-beat R&B and country selections , including Mean Woman Blues and You Win Again . |
6 | Jerry Lee Lewis … as tense as a newly released convictPHOTOGRAPH : DOUGLAS JEFFERY |
7 | Twenty-five years later in West Mercia , as a newly promoted superintendent , I listened at my first conference as my peers discussed a chief constable 's agreement which allowed officers to discard ties in hot weather and wear open-necked shirts . |
8 | At the resumed talks it was agreed that Petur Mladenov , the State Council President and former Foreign Affairs Minister , would be elected President of Bulgaria ( his formal election being carried out by the Assembly on April 3 ) , but would be replaced when a newly elected legislature approved a new constitution . |
9 | When a newly freed prisoner arrived at Bohorok it underwent a six-week quarantine . |
10 | We have the additional advantage of data on incidence , which is important because incidence rises before mortality when a newly introduced drug does cause cancer . |