Example sentences of "[vb base] now [verb] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Gregoire now has some hair and he 's put on weight !
2 Ironically , the properly market now wants more certainty about the future .
3 Today around 80% of the prints I produce now use this technique .
4 Today around 80% of the prints I produce now use this technique .
5 The court held that there was a contract between Lewis and the rogue and that therefore Averay now had perfect title to the car .
6 You do now want forward power diverted into other types of movement by the interaction of wave with hull .
7 SO , WE have the foundations : women do now have more control .
8 I , I compare test matches to more like the chess game you know it 's slower and you sort of you know whatever but these are people who would , did not to test games you know they did n't sort of say okay we 've now met this Pack a Ball thing where you know and everything else .
9 Yeah , because you 've now got extra benefit , you 've now got to increase the premium .
10 You 're perfectly capable of teaching ; it 's just that you 've now got this thing about it . ’
11 We 've now got sexual equality in theory , and pay , and jobs and status and stuff , but we 're facing attitudes which are much more harder to change .
12 We need now to transfer this quality of understanding of human need to general hospitals .
13 The Conservatives have now the Conservatives have now decided that home closure is the thing and you 'd expect them to produce figures to say we 've got to have thirteen or whatever number closed .
14 Several flyers have now demonstrated four point rolls and square loops , while there are rumours of inverted autorotations !
15 A number of hackers ' wives have now joined other grass widows parted from their husbands by golf or similar obsessional activities .
16 A number of research projects have now examined this question , and a number of conclusions have begun to emerge .
17 Doctors there have now begun extensive research into the connection between pregnancy and the onset of the disease .
18 Such that we have now achieved public recognition as a shining example of British enterprise .
19 What the new Earl faced , he said , was decreasing farm income and increasing repair bills : ‘ Traditional workmen 's skills have now become specialised craft skills .
20 Customs have now announced further clarification in the area of employee benefits .
21 Work on the two drainage ditches to keep water off the deck has now been completed and we have now done some work to provide steps down to trackbed level .
22 The ICF have now given provisional recognition to the canoe federations of Slovenia and Croatia as independent organizations .
23 ‘ I would liken them to the Hitler Youth Movement — using intimidating tactics to try to control those who come to matches and deterring decent fans from watching us , ’ said Jobson , whose Southend side have now gone nine League matches without a win .
24 City , whose power struggle has dominated the season 's headlines , continued to struggle on the pitch where they conceded two goals in the first 22 minutes and have now gone nine Premiership games without a win .
25 Wednesday have now gone seven League games without a win and must start taking chances or stop making basic mistakes at the back .
26 Selsun , long renowned for their effective anti-dandruff shampoo , have now created Soft Conditioner to complete the range .
27 I have now supplied sufficient evidence of Agatha Christie 's erudition and remarkable range of source-material to silence the most sceptical critic of my thesis .
28 To replace the depleted vegetation a range of species were planted on the island in the nineteenth century , including the maritime pine ( Pinus pinaster ) and blackwood ( Acacia melanoxylon ) , as well as a variety of herbs and shrubs which have now established specific vegetation zones .
29 The victory maintained the monopoly of British and Irish-trained horses , who have now exported this prize for the last 11 years .
30 Is he aware that a similar campaign was carried out by the hon. Member for Livingston ( Mr. Cook ) against trust hospitals in England , which have now delivered more patient care , cut waiting lists and been innovative in the service that they offer to patients ?
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