Example sentences of "[noun prp] [prep] now " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He 's got plenty enough on his plate at Swindon for now .
2 I 'll leave that with Kenneth for now
3 ‘ It put a £3 million price tag on his head , so what does that make Bobby worth now ?
4 TATTOO FOR NOW !
5 ‘ Anyone who comes to our office at Windsor Avenue between now and Wednesday will be able to register to buy tickets for the Republic match ’ he said .
6 Whereas the way now seems clear for development at Colt Hill between now and 1995/96 , despite the lack of schools capacity , the two sites owned by the Regional Council , which the Local Plan will reaffirm for housing development ( viz. East Braehead and Listloaning ) , are to be denied until after 1995 ( well after the projected survival of the Regional Council — thereby constraining the prospect of capitalising on the full value of these assets ) .
7 Leave Woil for now , for he has need to be by himself .
8 The United Nations finally recognizes Communist China , having supported the Nationalist exiles in Taiwan until now .
9 Who ever found English consuls at Tripoli , at Aleppo , at Babylon , at Basra and who heard of Englishmen at Goa before now ? what English ships did pass and repass the Strait of Magellan , traverse the mighty breadth of the South Sea [ the Pacific ] , enter into alliance , with amity and traffic with the princes of the Moluccas and the Isle of Java , double the famous Cape of Bona Speranza and return home most richly laden with the commodities of China , as the subjects of this now flourishing monarchy had done ?
10 Spencer by now was n't very pleased , Elstree were n't very thrilled about him landing back on the runway either , and with the hydraulic fluid gone , there were no flaps either .
11 The rich and famous — and Kylie by now was both — will always be magnets for those disturbed characters like John Lennon 's slayer , Mark Chapman ; psychotics , infatuated with the darker side of Andy Warhol 's chilling message — everyone can be famous for 15 minutes .
12 They 're due to stay in Split until April , and though each is due 15 days ' leave back in England between now and then , almost all of them will be away for Christmas .
13 The Scarabae would have to clothe Ruth from now on .
14 ‘ I would have thought it was all round Belial by now . ’
15 If it had n't been for your shiftless nephew , Suzie would be back in England by now , my mother would n't be having sleepless nights and I could be in London doing the job for which I 'm paid ! ’
16 The father , Jasim , was captured — but is since believed to have fled and may even be elsewhere in England by now .
17 ‘ We have almost certainly missed Fenella by now , ’ he said .
18 If she had liked me , I could be a rich man and engaged to Estella by now . ’
19 They might have caught up with X. Ray by now ; Martinho might have done away with himself .
20 If the cold had not completely numbed Ruth by now , she would have shuddered .
21 Mortimer had emptied his Browning by now , and could n't risk the time to reload .
22 But it used to be different then … there was n't no atmosphere like there is now and there were n't no fence around the London Road like now
23 I 'm based on the moons of Jupiter from now on , and the only time I 'll come back to earth will be strictly on a day-trip basis .
24 However , one pair of Italian wheel-lock pistols , now in a collection in America , is all that has been allowed to leave Schloss Dyck until now .
25 She was to call him Tom from now on , he had said … she had walked him to his car after he had dropped in to see Faye over lunch .
26 It seems highly likely that most if not all the beer produced in Brick Lane by now was porter .
27 Rose should surely have reached Vetch Street by now and Eddie been sent on his way by Matey or McAllister after being summoned from his nearby home .
28 That , my Lord , the matter moves on to the fifteenth of October on which day er the plaintiff together with Mr attended Richmond Magistrates Court and obtained a protection order from the justices in relation to the premises and then on the sixteenth of October erm this was the day when things started to go very badly wrong for the plaintiff because Mr by now had returned from his holiday and come back cautiously , he apparently attended after his holiday and on this day Mr was told that , by Mrs that it was not possible to proceed with the financial er dealings that had been agreed between them unless the Frinton property was offered as security .
29 ‘ We were supposed to have returned to Chelonia by now .
30 He must be talking to Dr Greene by now .
  Next page