Example sentences of "has now [verb] a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 HCIMA has now developed a full range of distance learning material which can be used in a variety of ways for those seeking supervisory or management qualifications without full or even part-time attendance at college .
2 But suppress these playful associations and the child has no incentive to tackle what has now become a dull , forbidding task .
3 Recorded music has now become a separate expressive form , thanks to a range of studio technologies deriving fundamentally from the ability to edit and amalgamate sounds , made possible by the use of magnetic tape .
4 British gardeners thought it was and the RHS Encyclopedia of Plants and Flowers has now become a best seller .
5 Achievement of the standard has now become a crucial part of the marketing for many companies .
6 The reason is that what was a favouring upward step in economic life has now become a hopeless enthralment .
7 The inclusion has now become a misfitting inclusion in a medium of elastic constants L with strain and stress .
8 Each individual aspect of dogdom has now become a complete science and discipline ; indeed , as I pen this foreword , a working party comprising the leading authorities on all aspects of dogs are compiling a nationally recognizable qualification allied to the ‘ City and Guilds ’ degree .
9 The loans are fixed until April 1990 to get over what was at the beginning of the week ‘ the current period of uncertainty ’ and has now become a gloomy fact .
10 The weekend break has now become a regular feature amongst the many special offers by hotels .
11 To meet their needs 926 was devised in consultation with the MSC and , following a pilot scheme , it has now become a regular part of the CGLI programme .
12 The financing of social services has now become a major issue of electoral concern .
13 After being sentenced the sex-slave image remains , but she has now become a wronged mother ( Daily Mail ) or mum ( Sun ) .
14 ‘ What I considered to be quite an insignificant idea at first has now become a viable business for me . ’
15 The National College has now become a financial liability that this union can no longer justify .
16 He has now become a passionate enthusiast for the Clarke reforms , and he made a speech of spectacular sycophancy in support of the health service bill on Monday .
17 This has now become a listed building and should a buyer be found for the surplus Ministry of Defence land , a pre-requisite would be the dismantling of the hangar and its re-erection on RAF Museum land .
18 It was designed as a safety net , but in many respects it has now become a high wire for farmers .
19 This new exhibition brought John Piper 's work to his home county just this month … but what began as a look at a private collection has now become a timely retrospective .
20 This new exhibition brought John Piper 's work to his home county just this month … but what began as a look at a private collection has now become a timely retrospective .
21 A rough diamond in his earlier years , he has now become a sophisticated centre who was drafted into the Irish World Cup squad , although he languished on the bench and was never called upon .
22 In economic terms the state has now become a mammoth corporation which produces coal , steel , oil , gas and electricity ; the primary source of rail and major source of air and other transport services ; the greatest property and house owner in the whole country ; a provider of most educational and health services ; a massive supplier of welfare services , for the young , the old , the pregnant , the unemployed , the disabled and the poor ; and a disposer of grants and subsidies on a scale hitherto unknown in human societies .
23 Cardiac transplantation has now become an accepted therapeutic option for many patients with terminal cardiac failure .
24 Campbell has no apologies about seeking to keep non-Indians from cashing in on what has now become an international mania for Indian objects .
25 Out of this and out of a more general TANU mass media seminar in 1968 was eventually to come TANU 's mass media committee , which has now become an important influence on Tanzania 's mass media as a whole .
26 It could have broken him , particularly with the other hardships he has suffered , but he has now adopted a philosophical approach to his plight .
27 The University has now presented a new petition to the Court of Sessions which informs the Trustees of the will which governs the Torre Bequest ( including a work by Ruysdael and a sculpture by Adriaen de Vries ) that their rights over the collection are to be removed .
28 BIIBA has now made a strong complaint to Fimbra about the latter 's decision to withdraw from an agreement made on 18 September which would have allowed BIIBA members , who held existing professional indemnity cover , to renew their existing policies .
29 Does my right hon. Friend accept that , through his energy and skill , he has now given a powerful send-off to the new United Nations and its new Secretary-General in the very complex and difficult tasks that we expect the UN to have to face in the post-cold-war world ?
30 This lush little box was recently made for you-know-who to hold his Watkins Copicat Retro-Classic ( Charlie Watkins has now reissued a modern , hand-built version of his famous valve-powered tape loop echo and preamp ) .
  Next page