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Now   /naʊ/   Listen
Now

adverb
1.
In the historical present; at this point in the narration of a series of past events.  "Washington now decides to cross the Delaware" , "The ship is now listing to port"
2.
In these times.  Synonyms: nowadays, today.  "We now rarely see horse-drawn vehicles on city streets" , "Today almost every home has television"
3.
Used to preface a command or reproof or request.  "Now pay attention"
4.
At the present moment.  Synonym: at present.  "The now-aging dictator" , "They are now abroad" , "He is busy at present writing a new novel" , "It could happen any time now"
5.
Without delay or hesitation; with no time intervening.  Synonyms: at once, directly, forthwith, immediately, instantly, like a shot, right away, straight off, straightaway.  "Found an answer straightaway" , "An official accused of dishonesty should be suspended forthwith" , "Come here now!"
6.
(prefatory or transitional) indicates a change of subject or activity.
7.
In the immediate past.
noun
1.
The momentary present.  "It worked up to right now"



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Now" Quotes from Famous Books



... public opinion, I suppose, because public opinion is, in the long run, the sovereign power in the state. There is not now, and probably there never has been a government that did not rest on public opinion. The best evidence of this is the fact that all governments have invariably sought either to control or, at least, ...
— Introduction to the Science of Sociology • Robert E. Park

... led a wandering vagabond life, and surely a stranger or more restless vagabond never went upon the road. In his pocket he had at almost any time from one to five thousand dollars, his bag went on from place to place ahead of him, and now and then he caught up with it, unpacked it, and wore a suit of his former Chicago clothes upon the streets of some town. For the most part, however, he wore the rough clothes bought from Ed, and, when these were gone, others like them, with a warm canvas outer jacket, and for rough weather ...
— Windy McPherson's Son • Sherwood Anderson

... master said he had once like to have been poisoned at a public-house; to which the prisoner answered that she remembered it very well. Her master said that one of the company died immediately, the other is now dead, but it was his fortune to be poisoned at last; and then looked hard at the prisoner, who appeared in great confusion, and seemed all in a tremble. Her master said further that it was white arsenic that was put into their wine. This witness then tells you that she sat up with the ...
— Trial of Mary Blandy • William Roughead

... persons connected with the family of Home of Wedderburn, and in particular on Admiral Sir David Milne of Milne-Graden and Lady Milne. An action was raised against the author and publishers, and damages were awarded against the former. The book was withdrawn from circulation, and is now extremely scarce. Home served as a midshipman on board the Bellerophon, and his "hair-brained narrative," as he calls it, adds some interesting details ...
— The Surrender of Napoleon • Sir Frederick Lewis Maitland

... to Monsieur Fontanes, and to Miss Rose Kingsley my thanks have been already paid for the use of some of Arnold's letters which are published now for the first time. It may be well to state that whenever, in the ensuing pages, passages are put in inverted commas, they are quoted from Arnold, unless some other authorship is indicated. Here and there I have ...
— Matthew Arnold • G. W. E. Russell


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