Example sentences of "[noun sg] [Wh det] has be describe [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It is a magnificent building which has been described as the greatest church in Christendom .
2 Although he is unwilling to specify in advance any privileged source of power , there nevertheless underlies his work what has been described as a ‘ philosophical monism ’ , a conception of a ‘ will to power ’ forever expanding and bursting forth in the form of a will to know .
3 The process which has been described in the development of abstract social relations is also accomplished in the relationship between persons and things .
4 Polysorbate 80 has been implicated in the E-ferol syndrome which has been described in infants .
5 Books make the ideal Christmas present , and among those currently in stock are Muriel Spark 's autobiography Curriculum Vitae , in which she writes of her childhood in Edinburgh and the people and places which have influenced her work — including the original Miss Brodie ; and Alisdair Gray 's new novel Poor Things , a Frankenstein-inspired tale which has been described as his best work yet .
6 Since then Fleur Cowles has gone on to develop a style which has been described as " Magic Realism " .
7 Formed in as a three-piece , they now have four members in their ranks and play music which has been described as a cross between Sonic Youth and Stiff Little Fingers .
8 Puck Fair is a trio of accomplished Irish musical emigrants who came together in the United States to perform music which has been described as a unique fusion between the spontaneity of jazz and the driving rhythms of traditional Irish jigs , reels and hornpipes .
9 Less extreme examples can be found in any street or office , and there is a move among women to make the best of ‘ prime-time ’ , a phase which has been described as the years between 35 and 60 , the time when a woman can capitalize on her experience , energy , and maturity .
10 One problem which has been described to me by nurses and health visitors who returned to practice before the advent of re-entry programmes is the difficulty represented by assumed knowledge .
11 This produces a ‘ borrowing ’ from English which has been described by Battison ( 1978 ) for ASL , and Woll ( 1981 ) for BSL .
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