be famous as in a sentence
- Sonoma may be famous as wine country, but, " Remember your cousin Larry?
- From that stage Lina s name would be famous as the knight.
- This hill will later be famous as the home of Nuada's great grandson Fionn mac Cumhaill.
- How many books does an author need to have sold to be famous as an author?
- Roberta Cowell attended Whitgift School, a John Cunningham, who would later be famous as an RAF Night fighter ace and test pilot.
- It's difficult to find be famous as in a sentence.
- "Well, " he said, " I guess we'll always be famous as the team that lost the first overtime game in WAC history.
- Lewes met writer Mary Ann Evans, later to be famous as George Eliot, in 1851, and by 1854 they had decided to live together.
- He later studied conducting at the Sibelius Academy, where his classmates included two Finns soon to be famous as conductors, Esa-Pekka Salonen and Jukka-Pekka Saraste.
- Arguing that he's not going to be famous a year from now is pointless-why do we still have dethtoll 17 : 28, 12 September 2007 ( UTC)
- Tuscaloosa may be famous as the home of the University of Alabama, its storied football program and one of college football's winningest coaches, Paul W . " Bear"
- Schwabing used to be famous as Munich's bohemian quarter and is still popular among tourists and locals, especially young people, for its accumulation of bars, clubs, and restaurants.
- "He really did high-quality work, and he got to be famous as a personality because he was tied in with the Studio 54 crowd, like Halston and Liza Minelli, " she said.
- "' Alhaj Moulana Peer Ghousavi Shah "'( Urdu : ) ( 4 November 1955 ) is a Muslim Sufi Mystic Teacher, Writer and Columnist said to be famous as a great humanist in south India.
- It would certainly be a disappointment, though, and would be famous as one of the big reasons we try to prove things in the first place . talk ) 18 : 59, 3 March 2008 ( UTC)
- The painter Degas once said " it's wonderful to be famous as long as you remain unknown . " Cartier-Bresson loved that remark and carried the photojournalistic penchant for invisibility to such attention-getting lengths as to shield his face while receiving an honorary degree at Oxford.