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

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1 I want now to consider some further aspects of " the creation of legitimacy " which most anthropologists consider to be the crucial function of any institution described as " marriage " .
2 Today around 80% of the prints I produce now use this technique .
3 Today around 80% of the prints I produce now use this technique .
4 I had now used most of my silver and , despite our profits , had to draw heavily , even borrow some more from the goldsmith , Waller , in his musty old shop in Mercery .
5 I had now regained some of my little courage , drew my sword and whirled it round my head like Sir Lancelot of the Lake .
6 But I 've now taken this out tonight .
7 I have now given some more thought to the next edition of Cymru Wledig .
8 I am sorry that it has taken longer to respond to your recent telephone call than I had expected , but I have now examined all the papers relating to this matter and have re-visited Captains Road .
9 I once went to the trouble of having a pair made in the finest white doeskin but fortunately I have now outgrown such extravagances in much the same way that I have outgrown the petty conversations and banal posturings of those who frequent literary gatherings or , worse , television studio canteens .
10 You may not believe this , but though Richard and I have now known each other for eighteen years on and off , the first time he kissed me was in the car-park last Thursday . ’
11 I have now discussed this idea with colleagues in CPRE who have indicated their interest in working jointly on this project .
12 Jean owns a shop which used to sell clothes but she has now decided that given the location she would make more money running a restaurant at the same premises .
13 With little formal training , she has now produced several illustrated books of animal portraits .
14 ‘ Of course we 're not all here , but you 've now met most of the team . ’
15 As I understand the position Mr and Mrs and the council have accepted that amendment so you 've now got that as your motion with your debate .
16 You 're perfectly capable of teaching ; it 's just that you 've now got this thing about it . ’
17 Because there must come a point somewhere in time where the shop will say well you 've now had these goods so long they 're no longer our responsibility .
18 I , I compare test matches to more like the chess game you know it 's slower and you sort of you know whatever but these are people who would , did not to test games you know they did n't sort of say okay we 've now met this Pack a Ball thing where you know and everything else .
19 We 've now created this virtual machine which is no longer constrained by the absolute size of any one component within that machine .
20 We 've now got more coaches at the club than National Express , but he can come back if he wants to .
21 But we 've now found that and it 's gone to the solicitor 's .
22 The ratio of bankers ' balances to deposit liabilities will be smaller than it was and if , as we have now said several times , the original ratio was a desired one , then banks will have to make further adjustments to their balance sheets to restore the ratio .
23 We have now extended these observations to DP thymocytes in TCR- β transgenic TCR- α mutant , TCR- β transgenic RAG-1 mutant and probably to TCR -α mutant mice .
24 On 25 June last year the Prime Minister said : ’ We have now met most of the humanitarian needs of the Kurds in Iraq . ’
25 And now a point we have now done that , we have now done one , right that is now going to be dealt with by Simon and introduced by Monica are they going to be dated the day she produces them or what are going to be dated ?
26 Work on the two drainage ditches to keep water off the deck has now been completed and we have now done some work to provide steps down to trackbed level .
27 After start-up funds from the Gulbenkian to employ our data-base operator , we have now received some funds from the Baring Foundation to assist us in this major task .
28 Richard we have now conducted some more audits , would you like to give us some feedback ?
29 It might seem that we have now exhausted all possible ways of trying to comprehend quantum mechanical measurement .
30 we argued there that erm scale of migration was not necessary to be contained within Leeds and Bradford , to promote regeneration because we 're s we 're now , we have now exhausted all our brown field sites to the extent that we 've had to take land out of our greenbelt , but there we were looking at something in the order of four thousand dwellings in three dris districts , spread over fifteen years , and we might reasonably assume that they 'd come forward in a dispersed manner on a site by site basis er and be relatively small scale , certainly we would be looking at the local plans which flow from this alteration to make sure that will be the case , now a new settlement 's a completely different animal , you would have to come forward quickly otherwise it would not be regarded as a success , it would it would need wide publicity , perhaps across the whole region , maybe even beyond , it would be a a major attraction to anybody thinking of moving house er from Leeds to a a location which would be accessible to them to retain their employment in Leeds , so I think we were talking about two different things entirely , more than that Mr Brighton 's su suggested that fifteen hundred would not be an adequate scale , it would have to be , I think two thousand five hundred was his figure , er Mr Timothy 's suggested th the same sort of thinking , and Mr Brook to , that the the settlement would have to get bigger , erm which only compounds our problem , any any settlement which grew larger and larger and inevitably would contain more employment as well as housing would become more of a threat to the regeneration of Leeds and , perhaps to a lesser extent Bradford , and it 's on
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