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

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1 Representing the operation of Laplace transformation by , it immediately follows that 11.5 ( a ) Unit step function delayed by time with respect to the origin of time , ( b ) unit pulse thought of as the difference between two unit step functions with differing delays and , ( c ) unit square wave thought of as a combination of unit step functions with delays that are multiples of half the period and ( d ) unit impulse function ( see text ) .
2 The concept of a profession is , as we have seen , based upon claims to specialised knowledge and skills developed over time through training .
3 The romantic-lyrical ballad style of twentieth-century Tin Pan Alley clings stubbornly to its role in the representation of gender relations within the norms set by the stereotype of the bourgeois couple , despite attempts made from time to time to move it into new patterns with new meanings .
4 Frequently generals thought it best if they were outmanoeuvred to in effect accept an honourable surrender er and er bargains of this kind occurred from time to time between largely mercenary armies .
5 If you work regularly for one agency you may want to have your position and experience reviewed from time to time , so that future work you undertake can be constructive and part of bona fide career development .
6 In its early days , the ERM allowed weak currencies to devalue from time to time .
7 The warning voices raised from time to time in the journal appear to have been in the minority .
8 her lips moving from time to time
9 Although much of their classicising work in bronze produced after 1933 was liked and acquired by the regime , even these far from rebellious artists came at times under suspicion of being ‘ degenerate ’ .
10 ‘ Widow Or Bust ’ is generally good crack and I found myself giving way to a bit of foot tapping from time to time .
11 Their labour histories consist of periods of work interspersed with times of unemployment , underemployment or black-economy jobs .
12 We change the compensation limits from time to time ; the current limits are published in our UK Letter Rates Guide , available at post offices .
13 The parents separated from time to time and the father also served a prison sentence .
14 Administrators meet from time to time .
15 ‘ Two Priests up the Jungle ’ ( which is what Old Fish Sparks sings from time to time to the tune of Red Sails in the Sunset ) — sure , but it 's about the sort of conflict running through human life in every time and every civilization .
16 Benny stumbled from time to time , and became tongue-tied when she looked at the handsome boy sitting beside them .
17 In addition , the information required to identify perceptual units such as phonemes overlaps in time with information about preceding and following phonemes .
18 They are very much a two-career couple and , although the work overlaps from time to time , they have two very distinct careers , which take them in different directions .
19 actually Galatasaray and other turkish teams seem to do well in the european cups from time to time … i do not have the stat 's right here ( or anywhere else ; - ) ) — but i 'm quite sure if you check it out you will see that G. have knocked out some other ‘ great teams ’ before Scum .
20 Until the mid or even the late 1950s these comparisons were made mainly in a discrete way in the belief that advantages shifted from time to time between one country and another [ Postan , 1967 ] .
21 This required taking such steps as arranging the candidate 's schedule so as to ensure that he arrived at campaign stops in time for coverage on the nightly news .
22 Subject to the payment of a fee prescribed from time to time by statutory instrument , any person is entitled to inspect and to obtain copies of ‘ any records kept by the registrar for the purposes of the Companies Acts ’ ; no distinction is drawn between the rights of members and inspection by other persons .
23 However , the drafter should remember that problems frequently arise where one party to a contract seeks to escape from it on the grounds that the other is in breach of a condition , and that the time for performance of obligations ( other than payment of money ) under a commercial contract is normally " of the essence " : a failure to perform on time in accordance with the contract will therefore justify the other party in terminating the contract ( see Bunge Corpn v Tradax Export SA [ 1981 ] 1 WLR 711 ) .
24 Does the right hon. Gentleman realise that , contrary to statements made from time to time by Northern Ireland Ministers , the administration of justice in Northern Ireland is signally failing to do that ?
25 His nasogastric tube has from time to time to be removed or re-inserted .
26 In common with all insurance companies , Legal & General has from time to time to adjust its premium terms to take into account the changing nature and frequency of household insurance claims .
27 The nature and degree of insanity which will afford a defence to a criminal charge has from time to time been a matter of considerable discussion .
28 the status of X Ltd being materially different from that as disclosed in the Information memorandum , then we should close the assignment and I would render a fee based on time to date at our scale rates .
29 Wounded were being carried through the trees to the shelter of the farm buildings , the medics stopping from time to time to rest , then continued quickly on their way .
30 Dinosaurs were , in fact , a serial species , dying off in relays , sometimes even with ‘ new , improved ’ versions emerging from time to time .
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