Example sentences of "[pers pn] now [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 Armed with restored confidence , a new machine and — hopefully — a little luck , I now returned to sites that had seemed promising but had yielded very little .
2 In the first case , I remember watching the old man come slowly down the stairs after ‘ a secret operation ’ never openly discussed but which I now take to be a colostomy .
3 I now return to the computational work in which I was engaged during these years .
4 I now turn to a consideration of some implications of the cognitive neuropsychology of face recognition for phenomenology — an approach to the mind and mental phenomena that gives prominence to introspectible ‘ phenomena ’ understood as acts of consciousness and their immediate objects .
5 I now turn to bacteria , the simplest organisms capable of a non-parasitic life .
6 I now turn to traits which seem not to contribute to the fitness of the individual even in their present form .
7 I now turn to the third of my questions : what controls the whole system ?
8 I now turn to the second problem I posed earlier .
9 I now turn to the professional encounters I had in the late 1970s and early 1980s with two senior but very different public figures , Lord Mountbatten and Harold Macmillan ( later Earl of Stockton ) .
10 The foregoing discussion of investment planning represents an essay in definition of the first of these conditions within the context of British capitalism ; I now turn to the second condition , and the relationship between the two .
11 I now turn to the question of social collectivities and political forces .
12 I now turn to the merits .
13 I now turn to the submission of Woolwich that your Lordships ' House should , despite the authorities to which I have referred , reformulate the law so as to establish that the subject who makes a payment in response to an unlawful demand of tax acquires forthwith a prima facie right in restitution to the repayment of the money .
14 I now turn to the cases on joint and several debts in other branches of the law .
15 I now turn to the third element ‘ property belonging to another . ’
16 I now turn to the second problem : If what we do is determined by some grand unified theory , why should the theory determine that we draw the right conclusions about the universe rather than the wrong ones ?
17 I now turn to the third problem , the questions of free will and responsibility for our actions .
18 I now turn to the other dimension of culture within higher education ; namely , higher education as a cultural experience for students .
19 I now turn to the question of transport , one of the aspects which most worry the people of Scotland .
20 I now turn to the third and what I think is the most worrying issue , the position of teachers falsely accused of abusing children in their care .
21 I now turn to the adoption minutes of city hall and now it is a process of in that city hall did not endorse a recommendation from the finance panel , the budget that came from finance panel erm so we are in the slightly unusual position of having to debate the proposals of finance panel as we were recommended to do by city hall , erm that means as I understand it that er the chair of city hall will now present the annual budget statement erm and since he is going to do that in a form of an amendment er that seven other unusual features about the way in which we would normally do it which would mean that there would be er a budget statement and where there would then be the the formal proposals and amendments themself , erm so what I would propose is to try and make sure that everybody has , has maximum opportunity to have their say erm because no two amendments can be on the floor at one time er to take what the leader of the council said first of all erm then to allow the other two leaders to present their budget alternatives as it were , without it be , this is just not did n't take it at that point if they do n't want to .
22 I now turn to the most vindictive act of the government in nineteen ninety two .
23 I now refer to our objections .
24 I now refer to the proposals regarding the repeal of the Coal Mines Regulation Act 1908 .
25 I now go to Debenham High School .
26 Richard erm if I now got to the stage of saying if if you had a choice , cos I have a luxury here of six companies er most recruiters just have one job for one company .
27 I now apply to the present case the principles that I have spent overlong in trying to identify .
28 I now come to a very controversial point on which I may be in a minority , but I think there is far too much written material with classical CDs .
29 I now come to the most shameful escapades committed — to which I was a party .
30 I now come to what I regard as the plaintiffs ' most convincing argument , namely , that paragraph 33 of Buckley J. 's order , combined with the letter dated 23 October 1991 from the Crown Prosecution Service , provides effective protection for the defendants against the criminal consequences of having to disclose incriminating information or documents by virtue of paragraphs 18(a) and ( c ) and 19(a) and ( c ) of the order .
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