Example sentences of "now be [vb pp] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | It required local authorities to establish maternity and child welfare committees , to include at least two women , and specified services for which grants would now be made available including home helps , food for expectant and nursing mothers and children under five , creches and day nurseries . |
2 | A list giving likely publications by the Comptroller and Auditor General in the coming months will now be made available in the Library . |
3 | The reason for highlighting this instance of attempted change can now be made clear . |
4 | NUM leader Arthur Scargill said all 31 pits should now be kept open . |
5 | One of the very first of them was Rossini 's Elisabetta Regina d'Inghilterra , which revolves around a real enough subject : the execution of what might now be called political prisoners . |
6 | It would be wrong to claim that Darwinism had no impact on the study of what would now be called ecological relationships , but the impact was indirect . |
7 | It was certainly possible to study what would now be called ecological relationships before the founding of scientific ecology . |
8 | His monistic philosophy promoted a sense of the unity of Nature among later generations of environmentalists , but it was several decades before serious work on what would now be called ecological topics began . |
9 | Throughout the first decade of television , the dominant influence was what would now be called stand-up comedy . |
10 | On a renewed application for leave to move for what would now be called judicial review , this court granted the application . |
11 | Standard thin sections required for teaching collections or archive purposes can now be given self-adhesive labels on which can be written all the details of the sample . |
12 | Some may now be given private rooms . |
13 | Specific developments within formal education and their relation to the new English can now be given direct attention . |
14 | EPS ( Encapsulated PostScript ) files containing TIFF bit-images can now be displayed on-screen and printed on non-PostScript printers . |
15 | Scholars can now be considered fortunate if they manage to find " one unworked field " , Three years later , McKerrow describes this great period as constituting a " revolution in literary history " in the course of which everything previously taken as axiomatic has been questioned or disproved . |
16 | Unbeaten at home this season , and with just two defeats away from home , Mick McGiven 's enterprising East Anglians must now be considered serious contenders for honours . |
17 | The problem of meeting the probable needs and wishes of the wider constituency which might now be considered eligible for some sort of formal association with the University after obtaining a qualification therefore needs to be addressed . |
18 | in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Byrne [ 1991 ] R.T.R. 119 must now be considered unsound . |
19 | The pyramidical shape in that year reflected what must now be considered high mortality rates at all ages , and particularly among the very young . |
20 | Certainly many interiors that have been gutted or scooped out in this way would now be considered worthy of retention — notably many of Nash 's interiors around Regent 's Park . |
21 | As a result , the purchaser can now be held responsible for all dismissal claims by employees dismissed in connection with the sale even if the dismissals took place at a time earlier than literally " immediately before " the transfer . |
22 | Unfortunately , instead of being integrated in a general hospital as planned , the wing will now be left high and dry . |
23 | The problem is very much a private one and I hope Graham will now be left alone to get on with leading the team on this tour . ’ |
24 | Indeed , most of the popular traditions associated with Constantine can now be proved erroneous . |
25 | ‘ Grant aid , which will now be paid monthly rather than quarterly , will be subject to continuing demonstration of sound financial management . ’ |