Example sentences of "he have become [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | In order to generate interest in his players and their careers , he has become a press and publicity machine . |
2 | Mind you he has become a bit of an opinionated arsehole recently … more like Jonathan King , or Nina Myskow — y'know being deliberately contentious to get people to write in . |
3 | The ANC has worthy successors to him , but he has become a symbol of the anti-apartheid struggle . |
4 | But by the end of the poem , he has become a character of extra-terrestrial proportions , a romantic sufferer carrying on his shoulders the sins of society . |
5 | If he has become a hero to the Muslim masses outside , and probably to a lot of Third World non-Muslims , it is not on his merits , but because the United States , with gratuitous and superfluous aid from Britain , has cast him for the part . |
6 | He has become a scapegoat and an excuse , so that romantic writers can maintain their vision of a lost golden age . |
7 | He has become a target for abuse — and powerful sponsors who back the team with around £20-£25million a year want a say in what has become the greatest sports outcry of all time . |
8 | Now he has become a pain in the neck to the establishment . |
9 | Following Gazza 's first league goal for Lazio in the derby match against Roma , and his unforgettable second against Pescara on December 6 , he has become a sensation in Italy . |
10 | This is partly because he has become the man most likely to win medals in the top competitions abroad — including the World Championships in Belgrade which start on Tuesday — notwithstanding his curiously fragile physique . |
11 | When Fussell tells us that the war was ‘ so devoid of ideological content that little could be said about its positive purposes that made political or intellectual sense ’ , he shows that he has become the prisoner of his own limited sources , and also of an imagination limited by distaste for his subject . |
12 | Oliver Cromwell has been accused of vandalising many of the ancient treasures of England 's towns , but he has become the victim of legend . |
13 | He has become an expert layman ( and a doctor groupie ) . |
14 | Should he have become a friar or a student ? |
15 | By the Ptolemaic Period he had become a god of healing and thus was associated with Imhotep in the Theban temples of Deir el-Medina and Deir el-Bahri . |
16 | In the event , he had become a Newfoundlander ; but in any case the Yeomanry 's long sojourn in Tunisia would not have satisfied him . |
17 | It was here that he had become a doorman before going on to live in England . |
18 | He had become a major in the military at twenty four and achieved much in the world in prosperity and position , but it had been an uphill climb . |
19 | He had become a kind of totem ; his extraordinary authority was based on that . |
20 | By now he had become a Test cricketer , having played in three of the exciting 1960–61 Tests against West Indies ( and substituted in the field in the tied Test at Brisbane , his first , at Melbourne , being the 500th Test match , and bringing him poignantly what were to remain best batting and bowling performances in an eight-Test career . |
21 | Associates were shocked by the transformation , and joked that he had become a plain-clothes policeman . |
22 | ‘ But he had started to drink heavily in recent months and Bernard felt he had become a liability . |
23 | By 1652 he had become a member of a syndicate engaged in victualling the navy . |
24 | He had become a hero for the garrison , for English and native defenders alike . |
25 | For Mailer , Lawrence 's greatness lies in part in his heroic struggle against his destiny , which was to be homosexual : ‘ he had become a man by an act of will , he was bone and blood of the classic family stuff out of which homosexuals are made , he had lifted himself out of his natural destiny which was probably to have the sexual life of a woman ’ ( p. 154 ) . |
26 | Now , he stared down at his Saturday suit and was afraid at the new possibility that he had become a man set in his ways , upset by change . |
27 | He went on talking of peace , but he had become a man who had allowed Britain 's major industry to be decimated and embittered . |
28 | Right-wing UNO parties had consistently demanded Ortega 's dismissal , especially since he had become a mainstay of the government . |
29 | Most children would rather learn about Julius Caesar who was a real person with a long nose , killed by his own friends because he had become a dictator , than study the rise of Meroe or Axum which have little interest to an eleven-year-old . |
30 | Because er , he he he had given them of of how he had become a Christian , he had become a minister of Jesus Christ and so on , he says , for this reason I suffer these things , but I am not ashamed , for I know whom I have believed . |