Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] now [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Most analysts have now cut their first quarter forecast , and the views now range from a loss of 64 cents a share to a profit of eight cents — and David Wu of S G Warburg has gone out on a limb with forecast $0.80 a share loss .
2 the proposals now submitted for the Control and Collection Sections within the Exchequer Division , as detailed in the Management Services report , be agreed
3 They have been beaten finalists on three occasions and the setbacks now act as a spur to the present squad .
4 With Robin Smith and Graeme Hick first Test certainties , the vacancies now appear to be at Nos 5 and 6 .
5 Most of the herbs now grown in Britain , culinary and domestic , as well as medicinal , resulted from the Roman invasion .
6 The taxes now levied on enterprise net income are essentially equivalent to value added taxes , although they are not completely uniform across republics and provinces .
7 Purley depôt was deemed to have completed its task as an annexe to Charlton Works by 29 November 1949 and was available to take the cars now housed at Thornton Heath .
8 With the fans now streaming through the turnstiles , many of them being stopped and searched before going any further , there 's a final briefing for the man who could influence their mood , referee Paul Harrison .
9 So the labels now need to be " translated " , and this becomes a collaborative process with children of different abilities working together .
10 It was estimated , following preliminary results of the congressional elections , that the Peronists now controlled at least 120 of the 254 seats in the Chamber of Deputies , a position strengthened further by their alliance with centre-right parties .
11 Much of the early social survey work was concerned with establishing the case for the need for nation-wide welfare provision along the lines now embodied in the modern welfare state .
12 Glues have improved since then , but the bows now coming to the fore are compound ones with wheels and pulleys and complex sights .
13 The directors now understood about O.G .
14 Since the loss of their monopoly as the ruling party , the communists now accounted for half the Politburo ; the rest represented the different parties who now shared power .
15 Let the judges now rule on our right to vote on Maastricht .
16 The quinolones now seem to be the antimicrobial agents of choice for acute bacterial prostatitis .
17 Underlying the offences now found in Part III is the assumption that a serious threat to public order is inherent in certain forms of expression .
18 These are the areas now ruined by salt .
19 Clearly , some of the needs now met by social services departments would be better met by the old people themselves if they had the financial means to preserve their own independence .
20 As it rose , the motors now screaming in protest , Ace could gradually see more of the opening from which the platform projected .
21 The dancers now appeared on a stage before a wide audience and the focus of their attention changed to the whole audience or to the most important performers .
22 He looked down to the gallery where the Santerres now stood outside the hall door .
23 It is from that sheet that the figures were transcribed on to the erm on to the pink and the , the , the , the , erm blue and the yellow sheets which have been circulated and which have been amended so that the figures now correspond on both sheets .
24 Both studies provide a necessary background to understanding some of the problems now faced by government .
25 This brief survey not only provides some historical depth to an understanding of contemporary British government — its structure , responsibilities , and political dominance — it also serves to reinforce our grasp of the political culture and to provide in part an explanation for some of the problems now associated with government .
26 I think it right to say at once that on the authorities , consisting of a series of previous decisions of the Divisional Court in which the provisions now contained in section 7(3) and ( 4 ) and section 8(2) of the Act of 1988 have been considered , neither the magistrate nor the Divisional Court in this case had any option but to decide as they did .
27 The French education system has had many of the features now introduced into the British system for more than a century and studying them may shed some light on future possibilities for schooling in this country .
28 That proposal , if implemented , would shift almost all the decision-making in homicide cases from the trial to the sentencing stage : the only issue of any consequence in most cases would be the sentence to be imposed , and all the distinctions now drawn at the stage of criminal liability would be reflected in the sentence alone .
29 This might be the case with provocation , for example : there may be objections to some of the distinctions now drawn by the law of provocation , but a broader defence of extreme emotional disturbance might provide for reduction of the offence in cases of loss of self-control when caring for a baby or when arrested by a police-officer known to be acting lawfully , and some might feel that there are strong arguments against this .
30 Where once their plants were collected from more exotic climes — euphorbia as a seedling from the Marquis de Sade 's derelict castle in Provence , alliums from the Professor 's botanical expeditions to Iran and Afghanistan for Flora Iranica ] — the Hewers now rely on a comprehensive collection nearer home .
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