Example sentences of "have [adv] been a " in BNC.
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1 | Now opera has rarely been a naturalistic medium , and never an understated one . |
2 | There has rarely been a clearer example of the extent to which a Conservative leader sets the keynote for the party the extent to which it is moulded round its leader . |
3 | Ferranti has had its problems in the past so has rarely been an investors ' favourite . |
4 | The last two summers have been very hot and dry , although this summer has luckily been a great deal better . |
5 | The original money was quickly invested and there has since been a stream of rights issues , particularly from companies in Thailand where the fund is 37.8 per cent invested . |
6 | It was effectively superseded in 1980 by the Latin American Integration Association ( LAIA ) , which allowed bilateral deals and has since been an umbrella under which they have proliferated ( Tussie 1987 : p. 129 ) . |
7 | Traditionally , corporate takeover activity has predominantly been a feature of UK and US markets . |
8 | There has obviously been a conscious decision and determination on his part to make his life a fulfilment of prophetic utterance . |
9 | The environment has hitherto been a fief of the interior ministry . |
10 | Beyond this , however , its origin has hitherto been an insoluble problem : the explicit evidence of the ancients is notoriously inadequate and various different theories have been constructed from it . |
11 | The Treaty brings about the formal transformation of what has hitherto been an Economic Community into a Union which is mandated to act in many areas on behalf of its own citizens , and to claim their allegiance . |
12 | ‘ I just wonder whether it has all been a waste of time . ’ |
13 | I hope it is not too late to say yes , I 'd like very much to have dinner on Friday and I too feel we 've been rather silly and it has all been a misunderstanding … ’ |
14 | It has all been a fantastic myth exploded by grim reality . |
15 | Naipaul has long been a reader of Conrad , and Guerrillas can make you think of Nostromo . |
16 | Non-evaluative criticism , as propounded by the successive Merton professors , Gardner and Carey , has long been a popular ideal at Oxford . |
17 | HOARDING clothes has long been a British vice . |
18 | Street children like Manoel now fear more than temporary incarceration at Febem , the Dickensian state orphanage that has long been a synonym for alienation and violence . |
19 | IT HAS long been a precept at Leicester Rugby Club . |
20 | It has long been a nightmare in Moscow that the region could be highly vulnerable to Islamic militants from the indigenous population 's ethnic and religious brothers across the borders in Afghanistan and Iran . |
21 | It has long been a nightmare in Moscow that the region could be highly vulnerable to Islamic militants from the indigenous population 's ethnic and religious brothers across the borders in Afghanistan and Iran . |
22 | THE seeds of popular revolt that appear to be taking root across Romania were sown last Thursday in the north-western town of Timisoara when President Nicolae Ceausescu 's security forces moved to evict the Protestant pastor , Laszlo Tokes , who has long been a thorn in the side of the regime . |
23 | The mere business of shifting passengers has long been a dreary distraction . |
24 | The Ley eventually reverted to the Garnstone estate and has long been a farmhouse , which it remains to this day . |
25 | In the freezing barren icelands of the Arctic north , whale and dolphin meat has long been a traditional and important part of the diet for coastal settlements . |
26 | Whereas Mr Orlando has long been a troublesome hero for his party , Mr Segni does not look like a troublemaker . |
27 | Getting industry to adopt new technologies has long been a problem . |
28 | This , too , is unlikely , for Mr Morita has long been a noisy critic of America and was saying nothing new . |
29 | Confiscating savings has long been a demand of the most reactionary groups who think that all private business is conducted by ‘ the mafia ’ , which the confiscation is supposed to hurt ( actually , the most criminalised businesses hold much of their savings in dollars and gold ) . |
30 | Making money out of the misfortune of others has long been a speciality of Swiss banks . |