Example sentences of "have become [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 Mackie , who has become secretary of the new Scottish Higher Education Funding Council , says it was necessary for universities to be better run .
2 Much of the syllabus has become part of the training of dancers all over the world .
3 It has become part of the ritual in the American eclipse .
4 Education has become part of the political battleground , and its transformation into a non-racial system can only be part of a much broader transformation of society .
5 Getting one 's feet done has become part of the ritual of old age .
6 This has become part of the rhetoric of reform .
7 And there would be a great sadness if it vanished , because it has become part of feline history .
8 The ‘ Oedipus complex ’ has become part of our common language , and yet it is seldom taken seriously ( except by parents of four-year-old boys — and even then it is unexpected ) .
9 In common use for so many domestic purposes , polythene has become part of everyday life .
10 For over five million passengers , Aurigny has become part of their holiday memories or a vital link with the outside world .
11 One of BRAC 's concerns at present is to see whether the lobon-gur solution has become part of the Bangladeshi culture , in so far as the mothers taught by BRAC 's Oral Therapy Replacement Workers might pass their knowledge down to their children .
12 It has become part of me .
13 Now the reconstruction of Georg Bähr 's great eighteenth-century Protestant church has become part of a DM1 billion ( £416 million ; $583 million ) campaign to restore the city centre to its appearance as recorded in Canaletto 's paintings .
14 Willingly or not , Mr Albert has become part of Germany 's insurance club .
15 The concept of mixed race , which has become part of conventional social work language , is misleading because it causes confusion in the minds of transracial adopters .
16 To meet such objections Ross developed a very useful concept which has become part of the regular stock in trade of moral philosophers , the concept of a prima facie duty .
17 It has become part of their workaday life .
18 Europe has absorbed huge quantities of ELT product in the last decade , to the extent that , in some sectors , UK-published product has become part of the fabric of the national education system .
19 In this way , she has become part of the total social fact , but we will present it as part of the age-old conflict between love and duty .
20 Though the dissolve has become part of film punctuation it can still shock or seduce the viewer .
21 Here we might point to the way Holiday Club International has become part of the wider leisure services and manufacturing group Bass Holdings .
22 The metaphor of commodity suggests itself ( with its marxian overtones ) precisely because research has become part of academic currency , bestowing credibility on those who possess a curriculum vitae listing their research publications .
23 The nightmare of childhood lived daily by orphan children in Romania is another example of a state of dreadful innocence abused by adults which is too painful to comprehend and yet which has become part of the domain of childhood as understood in Britain , just as images of the abuse of children by adults are also part of our daily reference to the violent world of childhood .
24 The processes through which the text has become part of the textuality of history will probably have meant the re-deployment of those original agencies so that they have reappeared in some disguised fashion within currently familiar structural organisation for understanding culture .
25 In effect the Park has become part of the city 's road network .
26 AIDS over recent years has become part of the daily experience of many of our partners working in Africa .
27 The tort of passing-off is wide enough to encompass other descriptive material such as slogans and visual images associated with an advertising campaign if this material has become part of the goodwill of the plaintiff 's product .
28 The ability to respond constructively to frequent re-organisations and a moving requirements target has become part of life .
29 It is a term widely used in planning refusals and appeals ; indeed the phrase ‘ injurious to the interests of amenity ’ has become part of the stock-in-trade jargon of the planning world .
30 If one accepts , as so many cases do that the skill and knowledge of the employee has become part of himself then it is difficult to see why any distinction should be made as postulated in the question .
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