Example sentences of "now [verb] on the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He now lived on the other side of the road from the Greencroft so it was very convenient for games of football or cricket .
2 Relief is now given on the first sale of BES holdings .
3 Fear on the inside and now fear on the outside as well .
4 Secondly , claims that the family is losing its educational function need to be balanced by an acknowledgment that increasing emphasis is now placed on the central role parents play in their child 's development , even where very young children spend part of the day in the care of another ( see Part Two ) .
5 The diffused fill light is now placed on the other side of the camera .
6 The company said Mr Saatchi would now concentrate on the overall strategy of the business while Mr Louis-Dreyfus would be responsible for its profits growth .
7 He leaned forward to retrieve one of the ejected cartridges now scattered on the tiled floor around his feet .
8 Mr. Michael : In the light of the White Paper , what importance should the public in Wales now place on the 10-year plans being prepared by health authorities and considered by his Department ?
9 Innocent began now to concentrate on the imperial bishops and on securing practical support for Otto , who in turn was exhorted to assume a manly attitude and in short " to live up to " the title to which he had been called .
10 At that time the square was bigger , with the palazzo standing at its centre , and the northern limit being the Palazzo Giureconsulti which now stands on the far side of Via Mercanti .
11 Since the opening of the Torpoint turnpike , around 1820 , it has been Sheviock that now stands on the main thoroughfare .
12 The stricken coach now stands on the hard shoulder of the M two having been lifted up the embankment by a heavy crane .
13 Lisa is eighteen and now lives on the nineteenth floor of a block of London flats with her nine-month-old daughter .
14 Lyle , who was born in Shropshire , but now lives on the exclusive Went-worth estate , is scheduled to move into a 16-bedroom home near Edinburgh in February and he added : ‘ Who knows , the baby might even be born in Scotland . ’
15 Their manners now border on the vulgar , and they are terribly arrogant . ’
16 They no longer rely on the taking of deposits to finance their lending , because they can now borrow on the wholesale money markets .
17 The club now meets on the first Tuesday evening in the month from 7.30 pm to 9.30 pm .
18 Now to look on the bright side of ffeatherstonehaugh 's , I 've a few more lines of Rochester for you :
19 Cooperation 2.0 also provides users with comprehensive network and systems management capabilities — Cooperation and NCR StarSentry products can now co-exist on the same network , and the network manager can configure , administer and manage a remote Unix server from a central StarSentry workstation , eliminating duplicate network management resources .
20 The high level of graphic design work in the course — in terms both of quality and quantity — is now based on the extensive use of this equipment .
21 Any decisions made about allocations are not value-free but are now based on the original assumptions about the weightings .
22 Whether the family can keep the bailiffs at bay may now depend on the continued generosity of wellwishers .
23 The net effect at A will now depend on the dynamical details a of white hole 's expansion .
24 Llanthony Priory 's future could now depend on the new National Lottery .
25 But much will now depend on the persuasive skills of Sir John Cuckney who 's leading the recovery operation .
26 Oxfam is now calling on the United Nations to relax sanctions against Iraq to allow the import of humanitarian items such as school eqipment .
27 Astron also carries a Russian X-ray detector , identical to one now flying on the manned Salyut 7 space station .
28 It is estimated that by the first decade of next century , only 20 per cent of the peat soils now present on the 561 square kilometres marked by the soil map of the Ely district will remain .
29 As Wassen , the next village after Gurtnellen , is approached , it is possible to see from the road the manner in which the railway line ( now running on the opposite side of the valley from both roads ) climbs the steep " steps " in the valley floor which occasion waterfalls .
30 This soft-left grouping has now re-emerged on the national executive , with David Blunkett as its standard-bearer .
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