Therewasno lack of demand for the product.From theCambridge English Corpus
 Early modern culturewasstill deeply imbued with warrior values, some of which (including those concerning women) were intensified by engagement with religious reformation.From theCambridge English Corpus
 The performancewasa great success and the showman collected a tidy sum of money.From theCambridge English Corpus
 The notion of longterm ' risk ', as we have seen,wasnot yet central to public health in the 1950s.From theCambridge English Corpus
 The intentionwasplainly to frighten the ruler into making his request at once.From theCambridge English Corpus
 In a deeply gendered consumer market, the use of cosmeticswasunambiguously coded as womanlike.From theCambridge English Corpus
 A bill based on the weight of the copper (and later zinc), and hence the amount of electricity used,wassent to the household.From theCambridge English Corpus
 The intellectual context of what at this timewasconsidered to be plausible and demonstrable is also significant.From theCambridge English Corpus
 The crucial pointwasthe remedy, financial compensation, or reinstatement.From theCambridge English Corpus
 Republicanism, in the sense of antimonarchism,wasa product of accident rather than design.From theCambridge English Corpus
 In the wider context of the decade thiswasa disturbing threat to a nominally ordered society.From theCambridge English Corpus
 Trustworthiness of the engineerswasalso paramount in attempts to establish railway locomotives as a safe, reliable, and cheap form of transportation.From theCambridge English Corpus
 Moreover, the death ratewasonly high amongst the older age groups.From theCambridge English Corpus
 Hewasforced to take some steps to check it.From theCambridge English Corpus
 In fact, although the discipline he imposed in his factorywasa severe one, itwasborn of a desire to improve his workmen's lot.From theCambridge English Corpus
 These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.