| Then, even more momentously in June 2014, he was named in the South Africa squad for the Tests against Wales and Scotland. |
| It is rather the reawakening of an old temper to which England's history has so often and so momentously given expression. |
| According to Taylor, a person need not disengage always or frequently for things to change momentously. |
| In the Abbey itself you can momentously visit an exhibition about modern Japanese art. |
| Cantelupe stands up, so momentously that Horsham's gentle flow of speech dries up. |
| At Tate Modern, the result was a momentously confusing opening hang, where nothing had a place in the greater scheme of things because there was no greater scheme of things. |