Example sentences of "now to [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Films are giving way now to videos as a PR method of communicating , for videos are generally cheaper and can be easily seen by many more people . |
2 | If this is you , write now to Centre Circle Sid . |
3 | It has proliferated nuclear weapon technologies and heavy weaponry to Algeria , Syria , Iraq , Pakistan and now to Iran . |
4 | Now to policies designed to attract previously unreachable groups of voters . |
5 | But Gascoigne wins it back , but Stein beats Gascoigne to the ball , lays it forward now to Simpson , Simpson — bad ball by Simpson , it 's Spurs in possession down the right side , it 's Paul Allen faced by Gary again , in fact it 's Paul Stewart , Stewart gets inside , will he get in the shooting chance , he 's trying to — chance now for Gascoigne , Gascoignes get in his shot and he 's scored . |
6 | And now to lunch . |
7 | Above all , responding now to initiatives launched by the Thatcher Government ensures that the alternative programme is not one cobbled together just before a three-week election campaign . |
8 | I mention this now to Gordon and he chuckles : ‘ I went specially for that shot . |
9 | Er , sir , at the risk of straying slightly into into two B , you , do forgive me in advance , but you raised the specific point about size , and and erm there was er one or two statements that there is n't a a clear view on size in P P G three , I think it 's important to bear in mind the interrelationship between all P P G s and as Mr Curtis said , the research that that backs them up , and I I I point you to three quotes in the statement that C P R E have put in , erm i i i paragraph four point one seven , an and s the quote that attaches to that is taken from the research that erm er backs up draft revised P P G thirteen , transport , and erm I shall quote from that on this question of size , i it is also evident that smaller settlements , those with populations of less than fifty thousand , but particularly very small settlements are characteristically less transport emissions efficient than larger settlements , I think the the erm essence of of that particular piece of research is not as Mr Davis was implying to achieve totally self contained settlements , I do n't believe such a concept exists , it 's actually erm a planning land use in the long term to reduce C O two emi emissions something that is essential now to government policy , I think perhaps more instructive though is is the quote that I 've in included in paragraph four point one nine and that 's taken from er er this book here which I perhaps should submit the whole chapter in evidence to the panel , I 've only just included one quote , it 's it 's I suggest one of the more interesting reads that you may have as a result of this panel , it 's by Colin Ward , and it 's called New Town , Home Town , it 's undertaken by er , sorry includes some of the work that 's been undertaken by the University of Reading , erm and er David Lock Associates , on erm er new town research , and this this is due to be published by H M S O shortly , it 's unfortunate that it was n't available in time for this E I P , but I think erm , if you 'll bear with me , I will read out the quote that I put in four point one nine , because I feel that it is useful on this question of of size , we concluded that if you are interested in environmental impact , energy conser consumption , and sustainability , new settlements have to reach a certain size to be worthwhile , it 's parallel to the old arguments that used to take place around self containment in new towns , we found that new settlements of much less than five thousand houses , that 's about fourteen thousand people are not really worthwhile because if they are smaller than that you are simply putting a housing estate in the countryside , a phrase that that has already been put round this morning , it appears that the best minimum for a new settlement , the best minimum , is about ten thousand houses , that 's that 's twenty five thousand people , which as it happens is about the size of the original garden cities . |
10 | We have 500 Noilly Prat Creative Entertaining recipe leaflets to give away ; write now to BBC Good Food /Noilly Prat Recipes ( address on opposite page ) or call ( 0839 ) 168106 . |
11 | Thought will have to be given now to players discouraged previously , including Ramprakash , who has had a raw deal while Hick has been favoured , and the hapless Fairbrother , for whom critics always seek reasons for non-selection . |
12 | McLaren boss Teddy Mayer as much as admitted at the end of 1975 that he thought Emerson wanted to move — or that he was in personal trouble of one kind and another — but the official news reached Hunt before it got to the team , and got to Hunt through Domingos Piedade , an eccentric figure close to the cheerful groupie Googie Zanon , a wealthy ( textiles ) Italian aristocrat whose support has been crucial to many drivers at critical points in their career , then ‘ manager ’ to Emerson and now to Ayrton Senna — a fringe career from which Domingos , hugely personable , but also often more a talker than a doer , has made a more than reasonable living . |
13 | We turn now to foregroundings which are less easy to recognize , because they are less absolute , and do not fit into the traditional rhetorical categories . |
14 | And then the shadows moved again , and Lugh could see that there was nothing there at all , and that he was nearer now to Tara than he had thought , and after all it had only been a trick of the light . |
15 | Can I move on now to re-employment . |
16 | Perhaps it 's best if I hand over now to Nick to run through the proposals there are some amendments to the one that you had as appendix one erm I do n't think any of them are too substantial . |
17 | And the language of Ulysses is noticeable in countless ways , taking now to the staccato bursts of signal flickering half thoughts , or the ebb and flow of daydream , now to extended disputation , now to pastiche , now to grotesque imaginings , now to the flattest or the sharpest of conversational exchanges . |
18 | Nayim now forward to Paul Stewart , sorry to Paul Allen , Allen lays it wide now to Fenwick , Fenwick to Gascoigne , Gascoigne cuts inside , this is where he 's his most dangerous , Gascoigne going forward looking for the one two to Walsh , to Gascoigne , Gascoigne 's on his way through , Gascoigne shoots — tremendous tackle — oh what a goal by Paul Gascoigne . |
19 | Turning now to commentaries , the following are relevant : Archives and Local History by F.G . |
20 | He saw no inconsistency between such temporary infatuations and the matrimonial ideal he presented now to Hooton , as he had already discussed it with Helen : ‘ I am not at all sure that there is anywhere a loftier , while there could be no sweeter , perfection than that of a household ’ . |
21 | Ludens said quickly , ‘ Look , we must go now to Patrick at once . |
22 | She had been shocked to read in the News of the World about the drugs that were available now to youngsters . |
23 | Turning now to impertinent , we can readily see that although the im -is replaceable by zero , it does not qualify as a semantic constituent : |
24 | But , as tears pricked the back of Fabia 's eyes , she realised that she was in danger of becoming over-emotional — which would be of no help just now to Cara . |
25 | Turning now to Carol 's talk , we can see that not all of her speech is " pure Creole " . |
26 | Just not there any more , you 've got to go to the town now to work . |
27 | Now to Rugby Park , where Kilmarnock , after a superb start to the season , had the chance to go within one game of their previous best Premier League run of ten matches undefeated . |
28 | He turned now to Dalgliesh and said again : |
29 | But some well let's go right now to Elizabeth Capewell here in the studio , she 's the Director of the Centre for Educational Responses to Disaster . |
30 | ISDN is one area of business that GTI is keen to develop — according to German market researcher MZA , the European market for ISDN telephone lines will grow in value from £200,000 now to £2.5m by the year 2,000 . |