Example sentences of "has create a [adj] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I believe that the legislation passed by the House has created a strong regulatory framework and I am always encouraging the regulators to root out fraud , incompetence and crime wherever it may be .
2 In ‘ That 's all … my friends ’ , at the Montaigne gallery until 15 December , the young French artist has created a setting full of allusions to artists such as Courbet , Millet , Man Ray , Duchamp , Marinetti , Klein , Warhol , Raysse and Cesar .
3 Not surprisingly therefore , the results of the 1983 survey show that mass unemployment ‘ has created a serious new risk of what can only be regarded as downward social mobility — and that risk is much greater for men in working class positions , by whatever route they come into them , than it is for others ’ ( p. 17 ) .
4 This accident of geography has created a vast central bog .
5 Using traditional styling techniques and traditional tools , Alan has created a beautiful sixties-style bouffant .
6 The European Commission has created a red ceramic tile to regulate the colour of tomato paste .
7 Instead , Petherbridge has created a charming eccentric shambles , demonstrating the movement exercises of a 19th century Professor of Stage Deportment and Declamation , speaking Shakespeare while spinning plates and splashing the wilder shores of directorial ambition : ‘ One ca n't , ’ he purrs with delight , ‘ walk across the stage without bumping into several concepts . ’
8 But Pauline Daniels has created a whole new interpretation of the uproarious soliloquy .
9 The unprecedented blitz of media hype surrounding the restoration , expansion and long awaited re-opening of Frank Lloyd Wright 's great spiralling concrete shell has created a huge public interest and lining up to get in and see what all the fuss is about has become the latest hot civic pursuit .
10 Cooper & Lybrand 's Mr Mole says : ‘ Haagen-Dazs has created a so-called super premium sector whose share of ‘ word of mouth ’ is out of all proportion to its share of what goes into the mouth . ’
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