Example sentences of "from now " in BNC.

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1 Know it 's too far advanced , must make its own way from now on .
2 I was going to have to be careful from now on .
3 from now on he was an enthusiastic convert ; a propagandist , indeed .
4 All I wanted to smell from now on was the fragrance of England which Aisha exuded .
5 I will use the French system for the numerical grades from now on , since they will be used in topos and in conversation with continental climbers .
6 Like the best wines , distinguished architecture matures over time : 50 years from now , Lloyds will be championed by as yet unborn conservationists , fought over in the media and ultimately listed Grade One .
7 City pundits see troubles for the economy in the coming months but are much more optimistic about prospects a year or more from now .
8 East Berlin church leaders , for instance , issued ‘ Four Urgent Pleas ’ on Monday night — the first being an appeal to East Germans ‘ from now on to exercise freedom of speech fearlessly , so that the discussion of our future can begin . ’
9 From now on , up to the election , it is one long campaign . ’
10 From now on I would only play on special invitation .
11 Predominantly a coastal bird , where it can usually been seen in large flocks from now until spring , in recent years it has spread inland to breed .
12 From now on , every rehearsal should be arranged and set up in this way , so that your band will sound the same every time you rehearse .
13 It 'll be all hands on deck from now on , ’ Moran told the girls as they sat over a late breakfast .
14 From now on your pelargoniums need 15–20°C ( 59–68°F ) warmth , moderate watering and plenty of light . ’
15 And in just some two years from now , perhaps three at the most , that same cleared forest ground will be abandoned .
16 Doctor Staples says you may take a turn on the walks from now on .
17 ‘ I told them that they were barred from the club from now on .
18 But from now on underwriters will be able to take on risks in any sector and brokers will no longer be forced to traipse around the market to place different strands of business with individual underwriters .
19 From now on my home is in England , but the business of boxing will be here , ’ he said .
20 One is the requirement that contracts in the independent sector should go from now on ( except in ‘ exceptional circumstances ’ and subject to minimum standard requirements ) to the highest bidder : the other is the reduction in the programme obligations which at present safeguard the claim of minority programmes to television time .
21 But from now on underwriters will be able to take on risks in any sector and brokers will no longer be forced to traipse around the market to place different strands of business with individual underwriters .
22 From now on my home is in England , but the business of boxing will be here , ’ he said .
23 From now on , it 's healthy eating , ’ she announces to her underwhelmed offspring and insists that they and their father go jogging and serves up watercress soup for tea .
24 From now on it will be mandatory . ’
25 Unofficial forecasts for inflation this month alone now range between 25 and 60 per cent — and companies will be free to set whatever prices they like from now on .
26 A year from now , in all likelihood , the world will look back on a merely disappointing year of little or no growth in Britain and America , of solid progress in Germany and Japan , of catastrophes skirted in the Gulf and the Soviet Union .
27 Even were a suitable one found , this would not obviously better the party 's chances in the general election due two years from now .
28 Well , the market will probably be up a year from now , and if he holds shares in all the ex-state companies ( 36 , less two taken over ) his risks are tolerably spread , with worthy water companies balancing clouded bits of aerospace .
29 They must have talked long and hard about their future , and from now on Helen believed that other people would probably regard them as being ‘ engaged ’ — a term she hated because of the overtones of male dominance and female sexual ignorance that went with it .
30 His long-held belief that spinners could not be trusted had been vindicated , and from now on Test cricket would take on a new dimension .
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