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

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1 To judge by the events of the past week , Michael Heseltine has now enrolled in the Nixon school .
2 This was well captured by George Orwell who , in Coming up for air ( 1939 ) , describes the return of George Bowling , after 18 unimaginative years in insurance and marriage to the joyless Hilda , and now shaken by the fear of a future war , returns to the village of his childhood : Lower Binfield .
3 ‘ People are entitled to be angry — the cynical deceit of the Tory election campaign , the easy promise that all the economy needed was the reassurance of a Tory victory , all now exposed in the harsh light of the real world . ’
4 He envisages that a change in outlook may derive from appreciation of the complex event sequences that new techniques have now exposed in the Quaternary ; from appraisal of the classical models of change to accommodate the realization that extreme rapidity of change now has to be considered when evaluating chronological biotal and geomorphological processes ; from adjustment of geomorphology to new knowledge of Quaternary change such as rate of ice sheet growth and decay ; and similar adjustment of biogeography and of palaeoclimatology .
5 Move the paper down to row B and check your answer against the correct one now exposed in the third column .
6 But unfortunately it has fallen face down and Shelley 's " shattered visage " is now pressed to the " lone and level sands " .
7 Relatively few influential activists would now quarrel with the recognition that markets are an effective way of generating wealth and indicating consumer preferences .
8 As a consequence , the number of ministerial appointees with farming experience has increased by over half since 1980 so that farming interests now predominate among the ministerially appointed members , as well as among the members appointed by the councils .
9 Her wrists were by now fastened to the post , and she was helpless .
10 The steel stanchions will now disappear with the net supported by ropes and a pole .
11 All agree that the main beneficiaries of the indigenization process have been the state functionaries and those few Nigerians who now sit on the boards of TNCs ( see Ake , 1985 ; Hoogvelt , 1979 ) .
12 The front two pews were removed ; a raised platform was built for the Communion table and choir who now sit inside the new , straight Communion rail .
13 Putting strands from each side into curl rags , she said , ‘ Now sit by the fire and brush the rest dry , while I collect the eggs . ’
14 The chairs now sit in the corner of a bedroom by a window , bringing a touch of Continental elegance to an otherwise very English interior .
15 It was an abomination and the Government were advised by the counterparts of those who now sit in the officials ' Box not to introduce it .
16 The loop is now formed around the bobbin case , and the thread drawn back through the needle by the take-up lever usually found on the front of the machine .
17 The report is now referred to the Personnel Committee on 11 May 1993 and on agreement will be implemented as soon as practically possible thereafter .
18 There is nothing in the history of the 1920s and 1930s to justify the cosy nostalgia that is now cloaked around the pre-war years .
19 The Middle East Economic Digest of Oct. 23 was also sceptical of the Sunday Times report , claiming that it ran counter to the " general view in Damascus that it is the president 's son Basel al-Assad> who is now favoured for the succession " .
20 It had shifted from its deep root and was loosened so that all the ‘ bad ’ — as his mother had called it — was now gathered into the volcanic pimple .
21 The askaris are now gathered around the vehicles , perhaps fearing that the Masai will attack them .
22 Their movement was direct and purposeful , quite unlike the earlier , haphazard approach of those who were now gathered in the ditch .
23 Traditionally tanned leathers will need to be treated with a good wax proofing agent to make them water resistant , although some leathers are now treated at the tanneries with special waterproof finishes .
24 On the strength of this scanty victory ( 23,000 votes , i.e. 28 per cent of the total number cast ) this largely unknown candidate was now treated by the media as ‘ the front runner ’ and ‘ the man to beat ’ , allowing him to gather the momentum that finally brought him the Democratic nomination .
25 With just 3,839 points , however , the odds are now stacked against the former Middlesbrough and Cleveland Harrier reaching 7,850 points , the qualifying score the winner must achieve to claim an automatic place in Britain 's Olympic team .
26 My mum and Mrs Quigley were now ritting on the arm of the sofa , their eyes glued to the screen , as Quigley paced around the room .
27 In this case the misgivings appear to be unfounded , but it does highlight the need for adequate controls on such experiments , both from a national and international perspective , since it is always possible that genetic engineering firms , which are now proliferating in the USA , Japan and northwest Europe , will turn to those , usually developing countries , where regulations are not as strict as those of , for example , the Environmental Protection Agency ( EPA ) in the USA .
28 Safely buried , Osiris now arose from the grave to train his son Horus for the punishment of Seth .
29 Well he 's got six for twenty-five at the Oval so he 's doing well in his test career , but it 's Lawrence now to bowl for the left-handed , who pushes that one back down the pitch , gets plenty of time .
30 That is a principle which is now honoured in the breach , most notably in the power extended to police officers to issue instructions to prevent an apprehended breach of the peace , a power which apparently is subject to very little effective judicial scrutiny or control .
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