Example sentences of "[be] in for a [adj] time " in BNC.
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1 | HAYDN-LOVERS are in for a good time this autumn : coming up are the Haydn at Esterhaza concerts at the Wigmore Hall ( part of the Magyarok Britain Salutes Hungary Festival ) ; already on display is the Haydn and England exhibition at the British Library ; and just started is the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment 's QEH Haydn series concentrating on his late choral works . |
2 | We are in for a tough time . ’ |
3 | We 're in for a rough time , Marcus . |
4 | ‘ It looks as though we 're in for a tough time ! ’ |
5 | Otherwise , they 're in for a grim time of it . |
6 | Ed was just like a one off and I 'm not forward any more at all and , you know , everyone thinks I am you know and Pete thought right I 'm in for a good time here , you know , I can probably get her you know , and so Charlie would have to carry out his part . |
7 | Michel thinks she will be in for a bad time when she realizes it . |
8 | On the other hand if you 've important business or vital meetings to attend you will be in for a tough time . |
9 | LONG ago , on dark nights when storms lashed the treacherous coastline , wreckers knew they were in for a busy time . |
10 | Yet he got off to a good start against New Zealand , and no one in England could have been in any doubt that even without Lloyd around their heroes were in for a tough time . |
11 | There are fears that Wall Street , which this week hit a peak , is in for a torrid time in the next few weeks . |
12 | Geoff Wildinson , assistant director for filed work , recognises the SSD is in for a tough time . |
13 | From what she had read in the diary , it seemed any boy with a pleasing face and the latest clothes was in for a good time . |
14 | Most of the Labour front bench , including Neil Kinnock , were in their places and the predictions were that I was in for a stormy time . |