Similar words: overtaken, take note, take notes, take notice, take note of, take no notice, take notice of, take no notice of. Meaning: adj. taken without permission or consent especially by public authority.
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61. In that event the players' registrations would be taken over by the League and transfer fees payable to Lytham.
62. By the time the star is sighted, octave passages have taken over and the excitement reaches fever pitch.
63. The firms have taken over many of the financial and information management jobs that companies used to do in-house.
64. These are corporations deliberately set up, taken over, or controlled for the explicit and sole purpose of executing criminal activity.
65. A paper long allied to the Liberal tradition had been allowed to be taken over by the right-wing Mail.
66. It was his job to keep watch through the night, but boredom and tiredness had taken over.
67. This was then subsequently taken over by Oatridge College and this department was not involved at that time.
68. Her legal challenge has been taken over by another prospective Citadel cadet, Nancy Mellette.
69. Taken over an average hard disk this could give around a 15 percent saving in space.
70. Our TV screens have been taken over by so-called yob culture.
71. Throughout November and December a few big cod can be taken over low water from the end of the sandbar on night tides.
71. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
72. Imagine that when you come home from a holiday, your house has been taken over by squatters.
73. He has already taken over 12 million paces and worn out six pairs of tough walking boots.
74. If you are not on the inside track, then decision are taken over which you have no influence.
75. In their sorrow, the Sisters showed me several photographs of Bapi that had been taken over the years.
76. Ever since Donald had taken over the management of the company, Robert's role had been gradually whittled away.
77. It was surely only people of diminished responsibility who found their lives being taken over in this way.
78. K., and the numbers is expected to dwindle as many are taken over, merge or convert to banks.
79. Currys was taken over in 1984, two years before the unsuccessful £1.8billion bid for Woolworths.
80. It is a gut reaction to the sense of having been taken over by affluent and alien strangers.
81. Up stepped Purse, who had only just taken over the penalty duties, as 32,000 Brummies looked the other way.
82. But perhaps the machine has taken over from the individual.
83. On Christmas day they stopped sending aid to the country, because he had taken over its government yet again.
84. So once again technology had taken over from old-fashioned human intelligence.
85. She withdrew because her case has been taken over by the local authority, her solicitor Alistair Babbington said.
86. One of the biggest employers in Gloucestershire has been taken over.
87. By the fifteenth century the higher ranks of the nobility had taken over again.
88. Since the bottom fell out of the market for supercars and classic cars, hot-rods have taken over.
89. In 1960, young Democrats had taken over the party by nominating John E Kennedy for the presidency.
90. On Saturdays, it arrived with a stylish colour magazine, taken over from the Sunday Telegraph.
More similar words: overtaken, take note, take notes, take notice, take note of, take no notice, take notice of, take no notice of, sit up and take notice, takeover, take over, overtake, take cover, taken, betaken, taken up, make noise, mistaken, partaken, undertaken, mistakenly, win over, run over, sign over, turn over, mourn over, turnover, be taken aback, make no bones about, taken for granted.