Example sentences of "has come [verb] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It is that industry itself has come to hold a position of exclusive predominance among human interests , which no single interest , and least of all the provision of the material means of existence , is fit to occupy .
2 Sufficient to say I was deeply embarrassed , and the time has come to put an end to this absurdity .
3 KENNY DALGLISH has come to see a side of Alan Shearer that he never knew existed when he shelled out £3.3 million on the England striker .
4 But when science proposes to manipulate the life of a human baby , the time has come to call a halt … . ’
5 At the pragmatic level then , the rivalry has come to seem a lot less fierce than it did .
6 In her catalogue introduction Alexandra Noble notes the extent to which installation art , using hybrid forms , has come to represent a challenge to the modernist emphasis on the purity of the particular medium .
7 Since he walked out of the cabinet in 1986 , Michael Heseltine has come to occupy a role in British politics that has few precedents .
8 Freudian in the modern world , has come to mean a belief , predominantly , that human behaviour is influenced by early experience .
9 The time has come to find a solution to prevent Britain becoming one big , dangerous rubbish tip .
10 Football since the 1950s has come to provide a kind of surrogate community for the young ; the club defines their identity and the ‘ end ’ is their territory , even if they have moved out to high-rise blocks miles away .
11 Football since the 1950s has come to provide a kind of surrogate community for the young ; the club defines their identity and the ‘ end ’ is their territory , even if they have moved out to the high-rise blocks miles away .
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