Example sentences of "[noun] [pers pn] now " in BNC.

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1 They 're one of the reasons I now make everyone come to me , rather than traipsing round the world . ’
2 The prize of five hundred pounds helped me start my business and as well as meeting the Prince I now send an outfit to the young princes every year .
3 I now bring before you all the attitudes I now realise to be wrong .
4 Two fingers I had waved at that driver as he thundered past me , cursing me through the open cab window and fighting the wheel , and those two fingers I now regretted having on my hand .
5 ‘ Thanks to what you told me about Lisa I now realise , perhaps for the first time , just how much influence people in the music world can have , albeit quite unknowingly , over impressionable youngsters .
6 In this damp clay I had left footprints , and over these footprints I now found the splayed-out pug marks of the tigress where she had jumped down from the rocks and followed me , until the kakar had seen her and given its alarm-call , whereon the tigress had left the track and entered the bushes where I had seen the movement .
7 ‘ You see , one of the advantages of being dead is that one is released as it were from the bonds of time and therefore I can see everything that has happened or will happen , all at the same time except that of course I now know that Time does not , for all practical purposes , exist . ’
8 It had puzzled me originally , but after a quick word with Glyn as you came into the offices I now see he wants to pressurise you into following his wishes and signing the house over . ’
9 I will not forget the many people I met in the course of developing the many images I now have of Slumptown Comprehensive .
10 After reading the story in the Echo I now realise it can happen on local lines .
11 After a recent stroke she now needs help with shopping and heavy housework .
12 But none of it was true — she 'd only said it to cover her own growing confusion , a confusion she now realised had come out of what she 'd begun to feel for him .
13 Having examined the main reasons which explain the predominance of localised , single-employer bargaining on the North American continent we now consider the case of Japan , the other major country in which collective bargaining is normally conducted on an enterprise basis rather than in the form of industry-wide agreements .
14 Good hygiene we now have .
15 Next , I would like to thank John for his support and encouragement I 'd like to mention Carole who has always been there when I 've needed At this point who again has always been very supportive I also want to thank members of the regional both past and present , but particularly I 'd like to thank all the regional officers and staff for their assistance and particularly George , Hugh and the officer I would also like to thank regional political officer for the Midlands and East Coast we now hold all the major positions of the Labour Party with I would also like to thank the national food and leisure committee for their help and support and particularly to David , Nick and To conclude , President , I 'd like to express my sincere thanks and love to those important people around me , my family .
16 Keeping these questions in mind we now briefly examine six different types of services where dementia sufferers may be found : a Policy No special needs housing agency in Scotland is known to have a formal written policy of dementia sufferers .
17 As a result we now know much more about the beginnings of towns in England as well as about their growth at all periods .
18 But it was n't to be and as a result we now have fewer engineers and probably fewer skilled people in industry than ever before : crumbly foundations to build upon if it is going to be built along the old traditional lines .
19 In this chapter we now look at the behaviour and properties of the three states of matter .
20 Although the ‘ Coronation Streets ’ of pre-war Britain may have lacked many of the amenities we now take for granted , at least they gave a sense of continuity in community to the people living in them — a sense which was buried in the concrete of municipal improvement .
21 Perhaps the most resonant phrases in the whole debate came from the pro-rights organiser who suggested that future centuries would come to regard our attitude to animals with the same horrified disbelief we now feel for the periods which practised slavery .
22 Yet in practice we now have a constitutional monarchy where the Queen acts on the advice of her Prime Minister .
23 Combined with better recognition algorithms we now see the advent of the pen-based or ‘ notepad ’ computer .
24 There is utter and total confusion and anything that stands still they used to say they would paint it in industry they now say market test it and they do admit to us that the end object does not necessarily mean complete contractorization or privatization , but at this particular moment in time
25 While for those thrust into a position of ‘ ritual liminality ’ there is the possibility of becoming ‘ men apart ’ , of standing aside and though not necessarily following political alternatives posed by any counter-culture , undertaking the hero 's journey merely by seeking to comment on the social condition they now see with new eyes .
26 Charlton 0 , Plymouth 0 PETER SHILTON made his playing debut for the Plymouth side he now manages against the team he first played against over 20 years ago .
27 His blackness he now regards as a personal stabilizer rather than a means for rejecting society .
28 These days he trains every morning with Torquay , the club he now captains , does weights in the afternoon at the town 's Imperial Hotel , then does another lot of weights for his upper body three nights a week at the local gym .
29 ‘ She only bought it in October and she had me wash it every Saturday since , ’ says Tim fingering the glossy body of the car he now drives .
30 When these are delivered , it will sell most of the 43 aircraft it now owns to keep its fleet the youngest — and hence cheapest to maintain — in the world .
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