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

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1 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 .
2 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 .
3 Having selected a remedy it must now be given , but first I would like to put in a little reassurance .
4 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 .
5 A case which might now be determined differently because of this exception is Dymond [ 1920 ] 2 KB 260 .
6 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 .
7 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 .
8 The only place they can now be found in the entire country is in Upper Teesdale .
9 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 .
10 However , The Scotsman has learned of the existence of considerable amount of unpublished medical evidence which may now be released by care workers concerned that the campaign to return the children home will succeed .
11 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 .
12 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 .
13 ‘ 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 . ’
14 One said that the US firm of Deloitte has a ‘ wonderful client list which will now be served from here ’ .
15 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 ?
16 However , if the Authority is to continue to seek to influence day-to-day classroom practice to this degree ( and this itself is a proposition which must now be questioned ) then certain fundamental changes are called for .
17 We at Holy Cross were able to have a happy relationship with the Baptists at Judson College , and I was invited to give a regular course in the comparative study of religion , which I attempted to do in the way which would now be described as that of dialogue .
18 In a personal injury action where the plaintiff prepares the summons it may now be served by the plaintiff 's solicitor sending it by first class post to the defendant at the address stated in the summons under Ord 7 , r10A .
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