Example sentences of "which [pron] [modal v] now " in BNC.

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1 The situation will be different with the genetic ailments of the mind , which I shall now discuss .
2 Is my right hon. and learned Friend aware that my local Labour party is circulating a leaflet , from which I shall now quote —
3 I do not know to which local authority the hon. Gentleman is referring , but may I try to explain the context of the debate to him , because it seems to be going straight over the heads of Conservative Members , as was evident in that intervention which I shall now try to answer .
4 I find that the qualifications she would have got was either the degree she hoped for or a Higher National Diploma for reasons which I shall now set out .
5 The decision of the Divisional Court in the Manchester Corporation case is not binding on this court and , although it may in the event have reached a conclusion with which I would now agree , I find the reasoning by which that conclusion was reached wholly unconvincing .
6 Both counsel in support of their respective submissions referred me to a number of authorities , to which I must now turn .
7 And it 's this journey from external reality to the profound truths of art , a journey which takes Proust through a series of investigations of the nature of time , the nature of the intellect , the nature of memory , it 's this journey which I must now attempt to trace , and I perhaps just ought to say that I think I get abstract once or twice from this point onwards .
8 I — she — there was something she wanted to know which I can now tell her . ’
9 Kagan arrived in my office and proceeded to tell me a story , which I can now recount as it is in the public domain .
10 The Department of Social Security has also offered arguments with which I will now briefly deal .
11 Now , erm , what 's wrong with this if you think about it , is that er it 's hard to know what fitness and fittest means and although I 'm now gon na spend about ten minutes talking about it , this will be the last time you 'll hear me mention the word fitness , and I strongly advise you to do the same , for reasons which I will now n now explain .
12 We now move to the erm sort of , two A which I will now as and this will be that Synod urges local churches through their consultations with district treasurers and the finance committee to incrus , increase their contribution to MMF in nineteen ninety three in such a way that the provincial commitment may be increased by at least five percent over the nineteen ninety two budgets targets sorry !
13 Ellen said in a tone which implied that I had entirely misunderstood the senator 's motives , which she would now have to explain to me by the application of sound feminist arguments .
14 Unused to spicy food , she took a long mouthful of the gin and tonic , which she could now no longer even taste , then very deliberately she finished the chicken wing and ate another one .
15 ( A friend of my youth held that his main aim in life was to become a dirty old man : an aim which one can now see was almost enlightened ! )
16 Our days weave together the simple pleasures of daily life , which we should never take for granted , and the higher pleasures of Art and Thought which we may now taste as we please , with none to forbid or criticise .
17 So far as he was concerned , a great danger had been averted , and the matter was now closed , but it had a sequel which we may now follow .
18 Nevertheless , the four categories enable us to identify common features of some of the different types of documents which we shall now consider in detail .
19 Woods has outlined some of the constraints that appear to induce survival-based patterns of teaching in the secondary school system — the raising of the school-leaving age ( to which we would now add growing youth unemployment ) , which encourages staying-on among those not otherwise especially enamoured of their school experience ; the persistence and extension of 16+ examinations against which teachers ' own success will be judged ( more of this later ) ; continuing high levels of class size and teacher-pupil ratios that make individualized treatment and small-group work difficult ; and declining levels of resources , which make experimentation and adjustment of learning tasks to individual needs problematic and leave teachers in the position of having to rely on their own personal resources for managing the class .
20 Early English pop was riddled with homosexuality and that sensibility which we would now call camp — partly this was due to homosexual familiarity with those areas of human activity which were now being exploited , and partly to the early music industry 's seedy beginnings on the fringes of established showbusiness .
21 ( b ) Does your argument suggest that we should look again at some other area , which we might now view differently ?
22 5.6 There is another important adjectival position which we should now introduce .
23 It is this question of the nature and incidents of these interests which we must now consider .
24 It depends on the act of viewpoint-shifting , which we must now consider more closely , remaining always on the lookout for loopholes through which the egoist might slip .
25 There is one further related problem which we must now briefly consider , namely our temporal distance from the events described in the New Testament .
26 But they had no place in public life , and we hear nothing about them in the Historia Novorum , which is concerned with events to which we must now turn .
27 This is an issue which we must now confront by considering what range of mystical activity the term religion includes and where its outer limits lie .
28 Even linear operators are too general for quantum mechanics for a reason to which we must now turn .
29 Now move in a little closer , and your next shot might show just one corner of the square which we can now see includes an attractive little feature : an ancient water-trough into which a cascade of water is pouring from the mouth of a gargoyle-like creature in stone .
30 This issue is , however , symptomatic of a deeper problem of explanation ; one to which we can now turn .
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