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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It 's hard now to see how The Shamen will keep the club vibe going in the stadiums they will undoubtedly end up playing , how Colin will avoid the rock postures he hates so much .
2 Having established the torque correction factors for the common excitation schemes of a three.phase motor and illustrated the method by which the factor may be found for motors with larger numbers of phases , we can now consider how the pull-out torque produced by the d.c. and fundamental current components varies with stepping rate .
3 With this in mind , we can now understand how the various ‘ communities ’ of the sea are arranged .
4 One can now see how the preliminary data dealt with in Chapter 1 on good and bad religiosity among Roman catholics is indicative of a long-standing historical contradiction .
5 Now consider how the same journey appears to a distant observer .
6 Now consider how the equilibrium in the unionized sector is affected by various exogenous shocks .
7 We now consider how the substance of those different sorts of essay is organised and presented , starting with techniques for commenting on a given passage .
8 We now know how the causal effect works : poor jobs lead to more stress-related disorders , and these in turn lead to absence from work .
9 Though pharmacologists now know how the present antimalarials work , quinine was initially based on a folk remedy and the rest were developed by producing chemicals and testing their effects .
10 We will now investigate how the length of the temporary reputation changes as discount factors tend to unity .
11 Now see how the brake lights ?
12 Presented with ( 32 ) , we therefore read it as a sequence of two events that occurred in that order : ( 32 ) Alfred went to the store and bought some whisky We now see how the semanticist armed with the notion of implicature can extricate himself from the dilemmas raised above in connection with examples ( 4 ) -(7) .
13 In other words , the recollection that the Friend had once been guilty of the same fault is a consolation to the Poet , for he now knows how the other must have ‘ bowed ’ under his own , ‘ transgression ’ : They are equal , then — but more , they are united : ‘ Oh , that our night of woe might have remember'd/My deepest sense how hard true sorrow hits . ’
  Next page