Example sentences of "we now [verb] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | All have been tried before to varying degrees — we now favour the fixed price tender again . |
2 | If we now increase the lower bound on x 3 from 1 to 2 ( meaning x 3 = 2 , in view of the upper bound on x 3 ) , this means we replace x 3 =x 3 + l with x 3 = x 3 + 2 , in other words x 3 with x 3 + 1 This results in the resource column shown in brackets in P2/T8 . |
3 | We now present the same example header , expanded to include additionally recommended information , adequate to most bibliographic purposes , in particular to allow for the creation of an AACR2-conformant bibliographic record , and also some ( mostly imaginary ) details about the text itself . |
4 | We now reach the impossible position where if somebody goes to appeal against us and they win , they can claim costs against us , and we actually have that now , we 've got fairly large sums of cost hanging against the council , so if I 'd like to ask Les to erm I 'd like to have his support for stronger planning laws , then we could do the things that he says we ought to do . |
5 | ‘ So we now take the easy way out by using gas which we carry with us . ’ |
6 | If we now take the opposite extreme , that of a gas , we do not know the positions of atoms , merely their mean velocities , and the only relation we can obtain between load and displacement derives from the gas law from which we can obtain the " bulk modulus ' of the gas and this " modulus ' is entirely entropic in origin , no elastic forces being involved . |
7 | We now ask the obvious question : Which polynomials in Q[x] are irreducible ? |
8 | In Hedley Byrne , however , the House of Lords considered that , for a duty of care to exist , it was sufficient to establish that the professional ought to have known that the third party would rely on his statement , Lord Reid put it this way : ‘ I say ‘ ought to have known ’ because in questions of negligence we now apply the objective standard of what the reasonable man would have done . ’ |
9 | We now obtain the partial solution for x unc in which we determine m of the unknowns x in terms of B , C , p and the remaining m — n unknowns z . |
10 | Further discussion thus has to focus attention on particular flows , and we now consider the two-dimensional wake to exemplify the procedures and the ideas that come from them . |
11 | We now consider the thermal state and crustal thickness , to determine the likelihood that the trondhjemites were produced by melting of the lower crust . |
12 | We now have the toughest set of controls on animal experimentation in Europe , and the number of animals used in experiments has fallen steadily . |
13 | A succession of Conservative Home Secretaries have ensured that we now have the largest prison building programme this century , with nine prisons built and 4,000 places provided , and 12 new prisons on the way . |
14 | We now have the largest investment programme of capital investment in the national health service that we have ever had . |
15 | And we now have the final symbolism of Ross Perot , the white knight set to storm Washington , who has in the not-so-distant past said that it might be necessary to suspend the constitution and cordon off black neighbourhoods and place them under martial law . |
16 | Further , and hence We now have the embarrassing impossibility of a negative sum of squares and must conclude that method ( b ) is unsatisfactory for computer use even though it is the more practicable for hand calculation . |
17 | ‘ Prime Ministers always have to consider balance in the Cabinet — and at least we now have the same number of women as old Etonians in John Major 's team , ’ she said . |
18 | We now compare the relative efficiency of perfect competition and pure monopoly and demonstrate the inherent inefficiency of monopoly . |
19 | If we now differentiate the steady-state growth condition ( 8–54 ) , and the government revenue constraint , evaluating at we obtain : and . |
20 | We now treat the same matrix by the third variant ( see Table 3 ) . |
21 | He said : ‘ We now face the real prospect of deteriorating services and the loss of some 7,000 jobs in supply industries . ’ |
22 | We now face the important question , how do these results affect our understanding of the search problem in speech processing ? |
23 | We now face the disgraceful situation of nearly 1 million children in primary schools being taught in classes of more than 30 . |
24 | We now face the difficult task of maintaining our vital services with progressively less support from the government . ’ |
25 | But if we now recall the alternative definition of democracy as popular power , or popular sovereignty , then it becomes clear that it can not be a democratic act for the people to vote away their own power and their own rights ; any more than if I freely renounce my freedom I can remain free because the renunciation was a free act . |
26 | The green belt also formed a tangible focal point for what we now call the environmental lobby . |
27 | Following the conquests of Alexander , Egypt and the rest of the area that we now call the Middle East were dominated by Hellenistic customs and views . |
28 | Einstein 's original theory of relativity , which he proposed in the paper written in 1905 , is what we now call the special theory of relativity . |
29 | The industry was unique in that the law prescribed for it health and recreational provisions , what we now call the social wage , for most of this century . |
30 | Let us now assume the opposite case . |