Example sentences of "[conj] can now be " in BNC.

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1 By far the best service that can now be done to these pubs , both for ourselves and future generations , is to leave well alone .
2 Almost all the information that can now be brought to bear is fragmentary and indirect .
3 Not quite : one meteorite that can now be classed with the polymict eucrites fell at Macibini , South Africa , on 23 September , 1936 .
4 The limitation that can now be placed on the child-bearing and child-rearing years gives women a greater choice as to whether to return to work sooner , later or not at all .
5 The recourse to social control measures has been entirely removed from this Act and can now be invoked only under general statute that regulates powers to suspend individual rights ( Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch. s. 1666 ) .
6 This coach , after some hundred years of care at Wolverton , was handed to the National Railway Museum , and can now be seen at its York Museum .
7 However , the study of difference has acquired a newer meaning and can now be seen in the light of a test of our theories of development and language , and in a way which does not isolate a particular group under study .
8 The mother image can be either the strict mother who has to be obeyed , or else the loving mother who has been hurt and can now be comforted .
9 In summary , the exclusion of through traffic would serve the city well and can now be justified by several arguments .
10 The authors add that by about this age , ‘ Stable structures have replaced earlier instabilities and can now be used in the service of new cognitive skills while keeping sexual drive components in greater isolation . ’
11 It is important to distinguish clearly between the features of the paper based life cycle which were a product of the limitations of the media and can now be joyfully abandoned , and methods which have an ongoing role when re-interpreted into the electronic life cycle .
12 Fortunately there are many commercially available products , but when this problem first emerged the only treatment available for a time was with sodium thiosulphate. in the days of black and white photography this was readily available but can now be quite difficult to obtain .
13 This doctrine has its roots in the equitable nature of the duty of confidence but can now be regarded as covering both equitable and contractual obligations of confidence ( see Initial Services Ltd v Putterill ) .
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