Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [to-vb] a [adj] time " in BNC.
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1 | I hope that the hon. Gentleman and I manage to spend a little time in Lancashire together , and that he will come to Bath . |
2 | ‘ I like a drink and I like to have a good time ! |
3 | I mean I use to do a full time job outside the home , then come back and do all the housework and the washing and the children . |
4 | I had to wait a long time for an answer , and just before the door opened I nearly came sufficiently to my senses to run away , but sanity came too late . |
5 | I had to wait a long time shut in . |
6 | And I was a bit late , so I had to wait a long time to get served . ’ |
7 | I have to look a second time |
8 | You want to have a good time and paint the town red this weekend , but somehow you feel restricted and constrained from enjoying life . |
9 | I want to work with people who want to have a good time . |
10 | She seemed to wait a long time before she heard footsteps within , and then a light sprang up beyond the frosted glass . |
11 | ‘ For one who intends to stay a long time with us , Englishman , you know little of us . |
12 | Erm we used at one time as you remember to have a full time education officer and er for a number of reasons er that er is no longer the case . |
13 | Or , if you like to spend a long time in the tub , you might like a wider one , which may well fit into the existing space . |
14 | But there are particular areas like this , you having to wait a long time and if you come into the building to go and see a film and you 've you 've left an hour to , to have some food you , you really should n't be missing the film because |
15 | Those normal , straightforward girls are part ofa society that she chose to leave a long time ago . |
16 | You learned to speak a long time ago and , no doubt , you have talked a good deal since then . |
17 | You had to pee a few times a day to survive . |
18 | If you have written in response to an advertisement they may ask you to telephone to arrange a suitable time for the interview . |
19 | Her bosses , unlike some , loved achievers , and encouraged her to write and broadcast , until with the publication of her biography The Improbable Puritan she left to become a full time writer . |
20 | But arrivals follow departures and the new appears very promising — even if you have to wait a little time for it . |
21 | Exactly you have to think a long time . |
22 | Before focusing on the way in which educational accountability has manifested itself in evaluation procedures we want to spend a little time exploring this more general picture . |
23 | We seem to have a good time whenever we 're out and always have something to talk about , which is really great . |
24 | She explained that with some people one had to wait a long time before one saw what one wanted to see . |
25 | We had to wait a long time because I had my mother to look after and she was rather difficult . ’ |
26 | So if , as seems likely , we have to wait a long time for a follow up to the triumphant Glyndebourne production , we should be all the more grateful for occasions like the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra 's concert performance ( sponsored by English Estates ) . |
27 | If any are received erm by the cutoff date , then it has to be my my submission that we have to have a reasonable time to respond . |
28 | Er we have to have a reasonable time to respond . |
29 | They 're , and they 're very good and they , they tend to stay a long time . |
30 | Was it easier for them was it easy for them to pick up work or would they have been woul would they have to face a long time on the dole or ? |