Example sentences of "[noun] [pron] [vb mod] now [be] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 ( a ) Have you discovered any methods which can now be used to investigate another text or author ?
2 Nothing has been more ominous in the doctrinal shift of the 1980s than the actual hostility to this term which can now be found in Roman teaching .
3 Apart from this belief in the straightforward truth of books which would now be seen as in differing degrees myth , with Adam as Everyman rather than a historical figure , for example , there was diffidence about the boundaries of science .
4 Several pathophysiological mechanisms have been implicated including premature atherosclerosis , increased circulating blood volume , a role for insulin , body sodium and catecholamines , abnormal central blood-pressure regulation and abnormalities of function or structure of plasma renin which will now be reviewed .
5 Having selected a remedy it must now be given , but first I would like to put in a little reassurance .
6 They had always been a task force in their own right and had a head start in this respect with their trained crews specialising in interceptions at sea and rummage duties , traditional skills which could now be deployed more swiftly and utilised more efficiently by use of new radio equipment and position finding navigational aids such as radar and Decca Navigators .
7 Other pieces showing the variety which could now be accommodated under the title ‘ canzon ’ are a ‘ capricio ’ in a number of short , sharply differentiated sections by Giovanni Battista Grillo and a composition for sixteen trombones by Tiburtio Massaino .
8 However , it is probably fair to say that systems theory is closer to a positivist approach than the views which will now be considered .
9 A case which might now be determined differently because of this exception is Dymond [ 1920 ] 2 KB 260 .
10 Yesterday officers from the City of London police set up a roadblock on Lower Thames Street — a scene which will now be repeated throughout the country .
11 While propagandists of drainage , such as Dugdale , admired the corn and the oil-seed rape which could now be sown on the drained land , they failed to appreciate that the people of Axholme already grew sufficient corn for their needs on the higher land .
12 This might exclude many students who are currently enrolled in English degrees , even those with good A-levels which can now be obtained very largely by studying drama and fiction .
13 The only place they can now be found in the entire country is in Upper Teesdale .
14 First , by spending less on goods and services , the government will free some resources which can now be used by the private sector .
15 Are there diversionary problems which could now be attacked ?
16 The problem of meeting the probable needs and wishes of the wider constituency which might now be considered eligible for some sort of formal association with the University after obtaining a qualification therefore needs to be addressed .
17 However , The Scotsman has learned of the existence of considerable amount of unpublished medical evidence which may now be released by care workers concerned that the campaign to return the children home will succeed .
18 The extent to which control has moved out of the hands of the local authorities can be seen in Figure 6.7 , where an asterisk ( * ) indicates a power traditionally held by the LEA which can now be taken over by schools which ‘ opt out ’ ; a dagger ( t ) indicates new powers which central government has taken on since 1979 , often transferred from the LEA ; and a double dagger ( 1– ) in the parents or governors column indicates new duties and rights they have received since 1979 .
19 Steve Tshwete , Kepler Wessels and Adrian Kuiper are profiled ; previous World Cups are summarised ; estimated playing personnel are listed ; blank scoresheets await the details which may now be identified .
20 That Jennens had some talent as a poet may be judged from ‘ Parthenissa 's Answer to the Pocket-Book 's Soliloquy ’ , a poem in Leapor 's second volume which can now be attributed to her .
21 Some were elderly people who would now be housed in old people 's homes .
22 No — their secrets were first revealed to curious scientific men , to apothecaries and simples-collectors , to people who could now be called botanists , and such was Evan Roberts .
23 But insurers have agreed to pay out if it is discovered in future that procedures which would now be classified as benign are found to cause environmental damage .
24 For whatever reason , the French failed either to withdraw their forces from what were intended as border strongholds or to reinforce them sufficiently to be able to withstand attacks from Vietminh forces which could now be launched at divisional strength trained and commensurately equipped by the Chinese communist armies which had reached the frontier the year before .
25 After them , families with heads in occupations which would now be placed in social class II : civil servants , school teachers , accountants , and the like ( table 2.4 ) .
26 As claimants to French lands and titles , the Plantagenets and their kinsmen and kinswomen were representatives of an Anglo-French civilization , and it is this cosmopolitan political and cultural world common to the courts of England and France which will now be examined .
27 I believe that the Conservative government itself will now be forced by the coming financial and economic crisis to slash its £24 billion a year arms bill .
28 ‘ It is my view they need an era of increased certainty which can now be built on the foundation of recent reform decisions and on which they can , with far more confidence than has been the case in the past , base and plan their futures . ’
29 One said that the US firm of Deloitte has a ‘ wonderful client list which will now be served from here ’ .
30 What message has he for the 2,000 television staff who lost their jobs in the run-up to the franchise round , and the similar number who will now be put out of work ?
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