Example sentences of "now [prep] be " in BNC.

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1 The previous scheme is now to be re-submitted .
2 Particular ‘ the relation to one as distinguished from another ’ ( O.E.D. ) The question now to be asked is where does the art of the particular begin in the creation of style ?
3 Dzerzinsky 's absence the Cheka was replaced by the GPU ( Gosudarstvennoe politicheskoe upravlenie ) , which was now to be integrated within the Commissariat for Internal Affairs .
4 Ramsey hoped now to be a teacher in a university .
5 Now to be honest if they had come to us first we would have got them into another union the t&gwu or ACTT but having said that , one thing we should knock on the head straight away .
6 The argument might be put forward , therefore , that the treatment slows the body clock enough for it now to be adjusted to a 24-hour day by normal time-cues .
7 He believes it would be extremely difficult for the Irish Government , having made these special exemptions , to announce that other parts of Mayo are now to be added to the list .
8 In addition , the Rayner review of the service introduced not only cuts but a new philosophy that official figures , which previously had been for the service of the nation as a whole , were now to be tied far more closely to the requirements of the government of the day .
9 But it is now to be cut .
10 The Latin a priori becomes the odd-looking apriori , and that useful little vade-mecum becomes the much more cumbersome vadémécum ( complete with accents which are now to be added , where appropriate , to all borrowed Latin and foreign words , as in mémorandum , allégretto , édelweiss , pédigrée ) .
11 In an attempt to get Frenchmen to pronounce borrowed words ‘ properly ’ ( ie , with a French accent ) , all English words ending in er are now to be written eur ; so le leader and le speaker become le leadeur and le speakeur .
12 What had appeared then to be contentment turned out now to be cold loneliness .
13 The ditch seemed a long time ago : two weeks and three days back to the lonely silent abandoned struggle in the attic , to the life that seemed now to be the dream , with Shellerton the reality .
14 It was not enough that they had been questioned at length about a work in which they had secretly collaborated : they were now to be insulted by having their acknowledged work dismissed as of small account .
15 Adrian Maguire 's injury robs the young Irishman of the chance of a rare double , and the prospects of Cool Ground , now to be ridden by Martin Lynch , may not be quite as obvious as the ground dries .
16 J. Churton Collins included ‘ Silvia and the Bee ’ and part of ‘ An Hymn to the Morning ’ in A Treasury of Minor British Poetry ( 1896 ) with the comment : ‘ Mary Leapor ( 1722–1746 ) appears now to be entirely forgotten , but she is a poetess of some merit . ’
17 Shortly before I visited Lindow Moss , Britain had just wasted £100 million in futile repairs to a submarine which is now to be scrapped .
18 That bitch 's turn now to be superseded !
19 And are you happy that you 've no need now to be traipsing away up the moor every noon-tide , eh ? ’
20 The Headmaster 's House had stood in the middle of fields , but it was now to be surrounded by educational plant .
21 These are now to be found only in the book sale-rooms , the most important of which are Bloomsbury Book Auctions in London and Dominic Winter Book Auctions of Swindon , and among antiquarian dealers .
22 This carried the law further than the 1967 Act because any term of imprisonment ( rather than five years minimum ) was now to be enough .
23 Standards were more likely to be improved , it was said , if parents had a greater choice of schools , and the new Technology Colleges were now to be among the choices on offer for those who lived in their catchment area .
24 But now to be ‘ orientated ’ is widely seen not as helpful guidance but as a test one has to submit to .
25 It is now to be seen in a deserted spot , not actually by the river but not far from it , on high ground by a little-used minor road .
26 It is not unusual for this situation now to be recognised officially , and many authorities have the positions of the leaders included in their Standing Orders , sometimes , for instance , making them ex-officio members of all committees and sub-committees of the Council .
27 Whatever showmanship may have been developed in the CHAB productions was now to be used originating talks programmes and other current affairs features , including discussion groups , from the Vancouver studios of CBC to the forty-odd stations of the national network .
28 the most expedient course to consult the architect who had already been employed to prepare plans for the particular office now to be built , and who from his official position in connexion with the Board of Works might be resorted to with the least invidiousness to the professional public .
29 The Training Authority has controlled the development of system and materials through direct funding but it has now to be marketed to the NHS in competition with a multitude of alternatives , many of which are long established and closely adapted to local needs .
30 The SDA itself is now to be dismantled and replaced by a series of local agencies .
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