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Example sentences for "has become"

  • The English are especially fond of black tea, and the people of the United States have followed their custom to the extent that it has become a favorite in this country.

  • Cook slowly for 1 or 2 hours, or until it has become a rich dark, clear color.

  • When it has become cold, turn it over and coat the bottom.

  • He has become already an image not to be lightly mixed up with others.

  • It has become quite a novelty to see her here.

  • Veterans' pensions and benefits" has become one of the largest single categories in the Federal Budget.

  • It has become evident to me that even today the interpretation of Mr Bergson's position is in many cases full of faults, which it would undoubtedly be worth while to assist in removing.

  • It consists in asking from time to time what point the object studied has reached, what it has become, in order to see what one could derive from it, or what it is fitting to say of it.

  • Everybody, indeed, has become aware of this more or less clearly.

  • In short, the local government, in the hands of peasants commanded by bureaucrats, has become a common, offensive lot of red tape.

  • Are we still ruled by the corrupt oligarchs or have we reached the stage where the people has become used to be fed on the property of others?

  • It has become necessary to revoke in haste the proscription.

  • Thus a New Zealand bird, originally granivorous and insectivorous, has become carnivorous, from the want of its natural supplies, and now tears the fleeces from the backs of the sheep, in order to feed on their living flesh.

  • His finesse, sharpened by the grindstone of adversity, has become mischievous.

  • Sustained one by the other, we have passed through many unhappy days; and it is at the very moment our trials are ending that he has become a criminal?

  • He has become an amateur detective for the sake of popularity, just like an author; and, as he is vainer than a peacock, he is apt to lose his temper and be very obstinate.

  • But what," murmured he, "has become of the child?

  • Now, this happened many thousands of moons since, and no one can say with certainty what has become of those captives, whom Christians are accustomed to call 'the lost tribes of Israel.

  • Then your color was light, like that of the fairest and handsomest of the Circassian race; now, it has become red.

  • To keep them, it has become necessary to take your scalp.

  • But what, then, has become of those benevolent sentiments which used to be the joy and the rule of your life?

  • But does any one know what has become of Moor?

  • Michael Strogoff" which, through its use as a stage play, has become one of the best known books of all the world, was first published in 1876.

  • It has become yours by right of conquest," he answered.

  • You've let your mind dwell until it has become inflamed on matters which really don't amount to much.

  • What you can't see and won't see is that it has become part of you.

  • I suppose you know he has become one of a very small group of men who control this country, and naturally he has been cruelly maligned.

  • But surely you did not think, in those days, that he would be as big as he has become?

  • At length she said, "Even if he has become a thief, he is still my son, and my eyes have beheld him once more.

  • What, however, has become of the goat who was to blame for the tailor driving out his three sons?

  • It has become luminous, and its clear rays, penetrating the abyss of the remote past, have brought within our ken some stages of the evolution of the earth.

  • And the mental flexibility thus slowly developed has passed by inheritance, and has been strengthened by use, until the tendency to vary, or think independently, has become an irrepressible instinct among some modern nations.

  • The great Falsity, behold it has become, in the very heart of it, a great Truth of Truths; and invites thee and all brave men to cooperate with it in transforming all the body and the joints into the noble likeness of that heart!

  • He has become a false mirror of this Universe; not a small mirror only, but a crooked, bedimmed and utterly deranged one.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "has become" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    confine ourselves; didst thou; fair maiden; has already been mentioned; has already been pointed; has already been shown; has also; has always; has been already observed; has been already said; has been said before; has been truly said; has been well said; has done; has given; has had; has nothing; has seen; has the; haste away; hastened back; mean what; seating himself; white lead; wicked works; will mark