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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Peake has been registered in time for tomorrow 's home game against Preston North End . ’
2 But he was concerned to prevent the system becoming a greater burden than ever through malpractice of the sort which the Worcester monk Hemming reports when he says that estates were sometimes taken even when the money due had been paid on time .
3 Mr Ensall admitted there had been delays , but that all mail had been processed on time since March 9 .
4 Snakes have been mobbed from time to time by groups of ground squirrels .
5 Certain other mechanical effects have been mentioned from time to time .
6 As the author of this publication , my opinion has been sought from time to time by dealers , other scholars and the auction rooms .
7 The Royal Navy equivalent award — the Distinguished Service Cross ( DSC ) , and the Army equivalent award — the Military Cross ( MC ) , will be covered in a later article within this series , both awards having been awarded at times to members of the RAF .
8 Whilst it would have been sensible for the remit to have been reviewed at time the organisation was created , we acknowledge the political realities that existed .
9 The following Spring , a still shaken Khrushchev called a group of writers to his dacha outside Moscow and told them that the Hungarian rising could have been avoided if a few writers had been shot in time .
10 Third party navigation rights have been suspended at times of crisis .
11 The decision in the case of Jean Sorelle Ltd v Rybak ( [ 1991 ] IRLR 153 ( EAT ) ) had decided that where an applicant acts on the advice of a member of the IT staff , it was open to an IT to hold that it was not reasonably practicable for the claim to have been presented in time .
12 As though the moment of passion had been frozen in time .
13 Documentary checks might be supplemented with results of site inspections to discover whether equipment was stored solely on site , whether it had been incorporated into the works , whether stage payments had been made on time and for the agreed amount .
14 The spirit had been caught from time to time long before and by the same crossing of Italian sweetness with Netherland technique , for instance in Josquin 's ‘ Pange lingua ’ Mass ( see pp. 1767 ) , but in Palestrina and Victoria it is all-pervading , incantatory , the ideal music of mystical faith , totally purged of human emotion ( except occasionally in their motets ) and of human vanity — except the vanity of performers who ( we learn with a shock from Giovanni Bassano 's Motetti , Madrigali el Canzoni Francese di diversi eccellentissimi Auttori …
15 A few freaks have been discovered from time to time , one amazing animal tipping the scales at no less than 43 lbs and a dwarf specimen at as little as 3 lbs , but these were abnormal .
16 ( Errors in calculation have been made at times , but discovered only when the water began to flow and it was found that the levada went uphill . )
17 ‘ Obviously some of the locos at the Snowdon Mountain Railway have been fitted from time to time .
18 They received no damages for the loss of some exceptionally lucrative government dyeing contracts which they would haze secured if the boiler had been delivered on time .
19 In January 1986 , the then Lord Chancellor ( Lord Hailsham ) said that the rules had been reviewed from time to time and the judiciary of the Supreme Court and the Circuit bench consulted .
20 Fortunately the alarm has been sounded in time for many of the province 's historic buildings .
21 Therefore the proportion of households headed by a married couple has been decreasing through time — it was 74 per cent in 1971 , 70 per cent in 1981 , and is expected to be only about 55 per cent in 2001 in England and Wales ( Department of the Environment , 1986a ) .
22 In the illustration in table 5.4 three values have been placed on time spent travelling , a frequent element in many CBA analyses .
23 Letters addressed to the present writer have been opened from time to time from at least 1973 to the present .
24 Although the archive has been used from time to time by researchers in pursuit of specific information , no general survey of the contents has been undertaken since the death of Lord Beveridge in 1963 .
25 From that site too come the Callanish eagles whose strength is not in flight , or size , or speed or skill but rather in a spirit whose power has been forget through time . ’
  Next page