Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] time to [noun] in " in BNC.

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1 However , the idea that archive work might be used in the training of embryo diplomats still surfaced from time to time in France .
2 It causes ‘ thrush ’ , which is an infection of mucous membranes occurring from time to time in young children , characterized by white patches developing in the mouth .
3 The answer he got was in the line that Frank looked uninspired in training ( well as ‘ inspired ’ as Deano looks from time to time in the games i guess Deano most look — very — inspired in training ) .
4 It did not take them very long to get the hang of it , scraping carefully with the blade at an angle of forty-five degrees and pausing from time to time in order to wipe it clean .
5 Govan car sheds were reputedly haunted by a figure which was seen from time to time in a driving compartment of a car but on investigation the figure had disappeared and was nowhere to be found ; the cab was empty yet strangely cold !
6 In addition , in some systems which have operated from time to time in the UK and elsewhere , there is a procedure whereby people are asked attitude questions about the product before the show and after it , and given the opportunity to select the test product ( from a list ) as a prize or gift .
7 The warning voices raised from time to time in the journal appear to have been in the minority .
8 The topic continues to be raised from time to time in the media including illustrations of how celebrity trials in America are reported on TV .
9 Perhaps no political argument could persuade American judges to reject the proposition that Congress must be elected in the manner prescribed by the Constitution , as amended from time to time in accordance with its own amending provisions .
10 These assets change from time to time in the ordinary course of business .
11 But seriously , vacancies will arise from time to time in all areas within the company .
12 There are other arguments that have been made along the same general lines , to the effect that to capture regular processes ( e.g. syntactic regularities ) one must refer to pragmatic concepts ( see e.g. Ross , 1975 ) , arguments that will arise from time to time in the Chapters below .
13 Undertakings are given from time to time in personal injury cases .
14 ‘ M'kata was a natural , one of those geniuses that emerge from time to time in the game .
15 But there are certain feelings and reactions in bereavement that are common to much of the animal kingdom , including the human race , and all who are caring for the bereaved need to be aware of them , as well as being ready to accept the tremendous range of responses that people can produce from time to time in their efforts to deal with their painful situation .
16 This atmosphere will ultimately emerge as something of immense value when ‘ the kindly light of reason ’ finally sweeps away all the incredible and stifling nonsense , which has been introduced from time to time in futile attempts to counter the inexorable demand that reason and common sense shall ultimately triumph , and replace superstition and blind senseless faith .
17 Clauses referring all disputes under a contract to an expert are encountered from time to time in practice .
18 Much other statistical and record material also appears from time to time in major newspapers and economic commercial and industrial periodicals .
19 In my own case by the time I became chairman of ICI , I had not actively sold in the marketplace for nine years , although , of course , as a director of a large international company I was involved from time to time in negotiations of one sort or another .
20 It is by no means clear that many newcomers are even aware of the feelings that they arouse from time to time in the local population .
21 Rates will vary from time to time in line with the general level of interest rates .
22 Interest rates may vary from time to time in line with the general level of interest rates .
23 And , as I hope to demonstrate from time to time in later chapters , it is as legitimate to utilize Lévi-Straussian notions where these seem appropriate and fruitful as it is to derive inspiration from Freud — without necessarily being a dogmatic , doctrinaire Freudian .
24 But the publication of these magazines was of course very demanding both in time and money and several faded away in the following decade , to be revived from time to time in spasmodic bouts of enthusiasm .
25 They were not only revived from time to time in Venice during the next twenty years but performed in a number of other Italian cities .
26 For , among other reasons , Turks did not fit into a Zuwaya genealogy ; in theory , it is possible to find all forty shaikhs who appeared from time to time in Zuwaya stories in a genealogy ( although it is only anthropologists who are sufficiently naive to ask which men were the victims and where did they fit in lists of ancestors ) .
27 I understand that this figure will be reviewed from time to time in the light of inflation .
28 It had lain there beneath the stiff formality of their talk , like fire under ice , surfacing from time to time in a look , a moment 's hesitation , a tacit smile .
29 Even this pleasure was rendered impure , since , as we had no heating in our bedrooms , we were forced into the family sitting-room , and felt , out of courtesy , obliged to join from time to time in the general conversation — a pursuit not very rewarding to either party .
30 Client will provide to KPMG such information as KPMG may reasonably request from time to time in connection with the Offer and will not , without prior consultation and the written consent of KPMG ( such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed ) make or publish any announcement , public statement or document concerning the Offer whether before the announcement of or during the course of the Offer ; and
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