Example sentences of "[noun] [modal v] [verb] [art] [adj] time " in BNC.

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1 It has also been a tenet of good security that prisoners should spend the maximum time outside their cells being kept busy working .
2 collection of data may take a long time especially if the survey covers a wide geographical area
3 It was the only time I felt slightly frightened and that was mainly because I 'd heard that a posterior labour could last a long time — even 24 hours .
4 Most of these solutions would take a long time to implement .
5 The second alternative would take a long time to achieve .
6 Given the long times required to charge the larger rods , you can see that after getting a first qualitative result with the smallest rods within a few weeks , a proper quantitative analysis to test the variation with rod diameter and current , and so establish the nature of the effect would take a long time .
7 Unless those tariffs are diminished our textile industry will have a tough time , and more jobs will be lost .
8 Reserves Duncan Chapman and Paul Pickering can expect a difficult time against in-form Dane , Richard Juul , and Max Schofield , the former Bear who will be determined to prove a point to Middlesbrough for allowing him to move on .
9 In some cases , however , the exigencies of timetabling for examinations and the demands made on students by applications for courses of further study can reduce the effective time available to the one-year foundation courses to as little as twenty or twenty-four weeks .
10 Fan assisted cabinets have a very rapid recovery following an air change , whereas plate evaporator designs can take a long time to return to the correct storage temperature .
11 Similarly , an only child may have a tough time leaving home without the support of brothers and sisters .
12 But the Chancellor may have a hard time explaining why the pound has to shadow the Deutschmark .
13 This means Zeneca might have a hard time charging much more than Merck 's price for its drug , even if Merrem is better .
14 COMEDY-thrillers could have a hard time without small black books that disappear containing the clue to mysterious fortunes .
15 They were n't right for each other and maybe a marriage would last a shorter time than a more informal , less intense liaison ; brief and bitter , both of them on proximity fuses with things coming rapidly to a crunch , rather than something more drawn out , where they might spend long periods apart and so forget how much they hated being together , and enjoy the fleeting , passionate moments of reunion …
16 Grouped update areas will take an overall time related to individual record processing time , buffer arrangement , update density , i.e. hit rate , and device rotation time .
17 Er I and the council will recall the last time we had a motion on V A T when we asked .
18 Well — Frank will have a tough time to get into Norway 's world cup squad .
19 Aerospace manufacturers and racing car constructors can afford the necessary time and trouble ; the car majors can not .
20 While it is true that the speculation is an essential part of science , and true that new ideas may have a hard time gaining acceptance , it does not follow that untested science belongs in court .
21 Those days must seem a long time ago .
22 But with the size that the baby is already , it 's likely Greene would have a hard time getting her beyond thirty-eight weeks .
23 If any of these poor beggars die of cold old Starling will have a hard time digging a hole for them . ’
24 The last recommendation was seized upon by critics who calculate that storing the most frequently-used books high up in the four towers will create a considerable time delay in transporting them down to the reading areas .
25 A minute may sound a short time , but it can easily mean the difference between life and death to someone in the water . ’
26 A person must have a reasonable time to prepare his case .
27 Betty and Joanne must have a hard time managing . ’
28 With him Chopin 's music leaves its earthly moorings far behind ; as one writer put it ‘ when Cortot is no more Chopin will die a second time . ’
29 A revival will take a long time , warned Davies , but spirited performances from players like Copsey and Lewis must give some cause for optimism .
30 The erm difference in cer some things can seem a long time ago and some are relatively recent .
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