Example sentences of "[pers pn] [modal v] now [verb] [prep] [det] " in BNC.

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1 To answer that I must now talk about that dark , unmentionable and secret thing called sex .
2 I shall now consider in some detail this last phenomenon — variable loss of [ h ] in stressed syllables initially before vowels .
3 The Chinaman normally on the landing you will now find outside this door . ’
4 For the ultimate in flexibility with Citalia you can now leave on any day you like , stay between 2 and 7 nights with a long stay option of 14 nights and return on the day you choose .
5 In this assessment of the sexual climate we may now look at some of the more reputable work which has been done in this country to analyse sexual experience and attitudes among our population .
6 We must now look at that bourgeois society .
7 We must now look at these hamlets : when they originated , how they developed and how they managed the landscape .
8 Whilst the Bill of Rights thus resolved the basic position for the future , it nevertheless left several questions unanswered and we must now turn to these :
9 We must now turn to those instructions which control the order in which these data.manipulation instructions are executed .
10 We 'll now vote on those in favour of an amendment standing in the name of ex-Councillor .
11 I was delighted with the way he jumped in the ground and we 'll now look for another small race as we want him to learn and build up his confidence , ’ the trainer added .
12 Having quoted the opening of Gormenghast in 1.4 as an example of an opaque style , we shall now return to another passage which occurs shortly after it in the same novel .
13 Having dealt at length with the management and , to a limited extent , with the financing of public sector higher education , we shall now consider in more detail the ‘ pooling ’ arrangements that have obtained in recent years and the likely criteria upon which NAB 's financial decisions will be based .
14 We will now look at this alternative view to explore its relevance to translation activities .
15 We can now assign to each species the various clusters which it is in .
16 We can now turn to another question : how is it that Sue was able to covary so accurately with the speech of her interlocutor ?
17 We can now attend to some of the specific ways in which these general initiatives were worked through , from an explicitly cultural standpoint .
18 There are other things we can now add to that .
19 We can now look at each of these practices in more detail .
20 We can now look at some applications of these principles to teaching .
21 Having set the scene , we can now look at some of the trades and convergences themselves .
22 Regardless of where their support came from , the fact was that possession of 38 seats in the Volkstag meant they could now rule with little or no reference to the other parties .
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