Example sentences of "[modal v] now [verb] that [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If the viewfinder image is still not sharp , you should now check that the eyepiece diopter adjustment is correct for your eyesight : you will find the adjustment ring or knob for this near to the eyepiece .
2 So , submits Mr. Browne , inviting analogy first between discovery in civil and in criminal proceedings , and then between the implied undertaking on the one hand and public interest immunity on the other , this court should now conclude that the immunity too has lapsed : in other words that there no longer remains any public interest in withholding these documents from further dissemination .
3 Assuming that you have managed to secure the pieces without any glue showing , the trickiest part of the operation comes next : you must now ensure that the mirror is scrupulously clean and free from dust .
4 These organisations must now demonstrate that the goodwill and voluntary co-operation of the farming and landowning community will be effective in protecting the countryside and , along with the Ministry of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food , they are focusing particularly on the Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group , which they helped to establish , as a major vehicle for promoting the Act .
5 It was easier galloping with his head straight , and the horse could now see that the man was quite relaxed .
6 And the Queen may now find that the monarchy faces the greatest threat to its survival since Edward VIII 's abdication over his affair with an American divorcee 56 years ago .
7 Working backwards we may now say that the effect of an infinite conducting plane is equivalent to that of a charge of opposite sign placed in the mirror position ( the negative charge is the image of the positive charge in the plane ) .
8 I should have thought that the hon. Lady would now recognise that the description that I gave was entirely apposite .
9 Some degree of influence can not be avoided , and in fact many sociologists would now argue that the sociologist has a definite responsibility to disseminate this knowledge in order to criticise delusions and misconceptions .
10 The reader will now realise that the size and growth of the ECMs are influenced by a complex array of demand and supply factors .
11 The government 's interim report on the SII talks , expected in April , will now say that the store law should be scrapped , possibly as early as 1992 .
12 In 1914 Ronald Jones argued that ‘ Everyone will now agree that a building should sincerely interpret the object for which it was erected , and should be the natural outcome of the conditions … of its own period and place ’ .
13 You will now see that the pearl eye feature has not been lost .
14 I can now confirm that the termination date of the contract has been agreed as 30 September 1992 .
15 We can now say that the meaning of an individual word is valuational to the extent that its prime role is to make the statements in which it occurs express certain attitudes , and that it is descriptive if its prime role is to specify the content either of the belief or of the attitude which sentences in which it occurs express .
16 Few people can now deny that the Education Act 1988 will bring about fundamental changes in the way that the service is both managed and delivered to children .
17 We can now see that the law and order issue can not be divorced from the rest of the Conservative Government 's policies during the Thatcher years .
18 If we continue with our analogy , introduced a moment ago , of the Bank as the monopoly supplier of liquidity and the discount houses as the buyers , we can now see that the discount market is one in which ( by debt sales ) the monopolist is able to determine the position of the demand curve !
19 That realisation is a product of the power of rational thought which came to the emerging ‘ human' ’ being in the course of the evolutionary process , for it is in remote retrospect that man can now see that the division of the first cell was a ‘ good ’ event , and had to be defined as such for the unanswerable reason that it could not have been anything else , otherwise there was nothing that could be defined as the origin of ‘ good ’ that was not dependent on dogma and superstition .
20 We can now see that the organism and the group of organisms are true rivals for the vehicle role in the story , but neither of them is even a candidate for the replicator role .
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