Example sentences of "been [vb pp] [adv] [adv] [conj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Plainly , there was no such feature in the building prior to its conversion , but its insertion has been undertaken so carefully and with such sensitivity towards the simple , almost primitive shapes and textures of the original interior that it looks like a perfectly natural element .
2 Furthermore , in the case of the Netherlands , von Beyme ( 1980 ) sees the tendency towards decentralisation in the early 1970s as a reaction to the failure of attempts to promote a central incomes policy — which had been pursued more strongly than in other countries .
3 M my view about this is that it 's it it is it is that this exercise is that it is er something which has been done very quickly and to my mind is not capable of providing the level of assessment that would be required .
4 What had happened was that the wall had been built much later and from a higher ground level .
5 In few periods in early Ottoman history can that need have been felt more strongly than in the years following Ankara .
6 In this book we will be using the ‘ C-word ’ in these senses to refer to the present penal situation in England and Wales , albeit with slight embarrassment and the worry that it has been used so often and for so long that there is a danger that it may be losing its dramatic impact .
7 That gastric metaplasia develops in response to acid hypersecretion has been found both experimentally and in human studies .
8 How rich it is to hear the Scottish Labour leader impugn the integrity of the SNP when the integrity of Labour Party policies in the last year has been stretched so far as to be invisible .
9 So although no route can more truly be called a " beaten track " than the one which heads for the Gotthard Pass , now that the old Gotthard road has been supplanted so far as through traffic is concerned by the Basel-Chiasso motor expressway ( E9 , N2 ) , many towns and villages on the old road can be rated as " off the beaten track " .
10 The notion of taking had been extended both judicially and by statute and examples of statutory extension by way of sections 17(1) ( b ) ( embezzlement ) and 20(1) ( iv ) ( fraudulent conversion ) of the Larceny Act 1916 are given in paragraph 17 .
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