Example sentences of "[prep] [Wh det] have come to " in BNC.
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1 | All that I saw was seen also by Hugh Beringar , but after what has come to light this morning these details fall into place . ’ |
2 | In Acts we have two vivid descriptions of what has come to be called the communism of the early Church : ‘ All who believed were together and had all things in common ; and they sold their possessions and goods and distributed them to all , as any had need ’ ( Acts 2:44–5 ) ; and ‘ No one said that any of the things which he possessed was his own , but they had everything in common … |
3 | One other sideways bound was the creation of what has come to be called the police procedural . |
4 | Discourse analysts have for over a decade been probing the properties of what has come to be called the conversational ‘ turn ’ . |
5 | There 's a mill near what has come to be known as Wigan Pier . |
6 | Now it seems that some things work , especially those like the AEC that are associated with what has come to be described as the problem-focused/task-centred approach ( Roberts , 1990 ) . |
7 | The 1907 Hague Convention IV also contains an important provision in the preamble to the main convention , in what has come to be known as the Martens clause . |
8 | The garrison suffered considerably , but on 15 August 1416 John , duke of Bedford , defeated the enemy fleet in the estuary in what has come to be known as the battle of the Seine . |
9 | Fragrant herbs play a great part in what has come to be called aromatherapy , in which essential fragrant oils from herbs are rubbed on to the skin . |
10 | Since this decision relates , in English , to what has come to be accepted as a key element in children 's potential to achieve at school , that is their linguistic competence , the English teacher has a heavier responsibility when he [ or she ] attempts to resolve it than staff concerned with other parts of the curriculum . |
11 | This contrasts strongly with practice recommended in much of US literature , particularly that on what has come to be called ‘ competitive intelligence ’ , of a central coordinated and proactive gathering of both formal and informal environmental information and its dissemination throughout the firm . |
12 | In using such sources , they relied largely on what has come to be known as the ‘ comparative method ’ . |
13 | I also want to address two more complex issues in textual and sexual theory : firstly , the political implications of poststructuralist attempts to discredit notions of authorial agency ; and secondly , the related debates in gay theory around what have come to be known as the poles of ‘ essentialism ’ and ‘ social constructionism ’ ( terms I will elaborate on later ) . |
14 | They may well feel the case against your brother is substantially weakened by what 's come to light . |
15 | The Financial Services Act 1986 introduced a régime for the control of persons and bodies carrying on various kinds of financial business , or offering financial services by what has come to be known as self-regulation . |