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

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1 The down-side may be that you now see without any shadow of doubt that you can not exist in an emotional or sexual wilderness indefinitely .
2 She now speaks of those hours of heady emotion in a voice of wry amusement : ‘ I had tremendous hopes in my heart . ’
3 She now participates in most of the exercises and her doctor ca n't believe the change and improvement in her .
4 As we have seen from the blueprint of Mrs Thatcher 's Engine Room in table 1 , she now presides over some 160 of the hated things , though not , naturally , in the literal sense of chairing the lot .
5 We now return to each item in the fine observation kit .
6 If we now add to this the possibility that those units or sectors experiencing a fall in supply switch to borrowing from banks , the money supply will increase .
7 The defeasibility suggestion could be said to provide an extension of the earlier requirement that there be no relevant falsehoods ; we now look beyond those propositions actually believed by the believer to propositions which would have an effect if they were believed .
8 ‘ Social democracy ’ scored better than ‘ communism ’ or ‘ liberalism ’ when Poles and Hungarians were asked how they now felt about these ‘ isms ’ in a poll that was organised recently by a French firm , Conseils-Sondages-Analyses and Le Journal des Elections .
9 This was once two cottages , a one-up , one-down 16th-century croft , and a more conventional one from the 1920s — they now ramble into each other at different levels .
10 They now point to another threat : that the Americans will use the Gulf battlefields to test new weapons and so keep an arms race going , for quality if not quantity .
11 They now cater for some 22% of the 16+ population and vary in size from 200+ to 1000+ .
12 They now account for another quarter .
13 Instead of sitting lost in their own thoughts or sleeping , the patients had been stimulated and they now chatted to each other as they recalled the places , the people or the events of the past .
14 Talking during the week with a veteran of the ANC — a man who has opposed Smith publicly and privately for years — I was surprised to hear him say , ‘ Whether the PM was right or wrong , we must assist him now to look into this idea of a change of heart . ’
15 Will he now look at those matters seriously because , in the present recession , those institutions are in a grievous plight about which the Minister must do something ?
16 Nor , for once , did he enclose his curriculum vitae — which he now contemplated with some discomfort .
17 It now falls between all stools and can not be allowed to suffer a lingering death any longer .
18 What Hollywood had been doing was living off its wits and trying to survive as best it could but it now responded to this challenge not necessarily by taking Dr Dale 's ‘ entire world ’ as its range but at least by ensuring that there were values in its films .
19 He is modernity as it now exists in that part of the world .
20 THE NATIONAL MARRIAGE GUIDANCE COUNCIL ( now called RELATE ) recognised a long time ago that the fabric of society has changed and one of the reasons for the organisation 's change of name is that it now deals with all personal crisis situations .
21 Let us now turn to another example of how mathematics , through the breadth of its applications , allows us to attack more than one problem with a single weapon .
22 Let us now turn to this very different approach .
23 Let us now turn to these RHA Conditions in some detail .
24 Let us now look at each of these kinds of books in turn and see what we can about how they are written .
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