Example sentences of "[noun pl] [vb base] [prep] [noun] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 In the absence of transactions costs for trading futures and assuming no risk aversion or preference , the current price of a futures contract for delivery at time T in a competitive market will equal today 's expectation of the spot price at time T , that is , F t = E ( S T ) .
2 Administrators meet from time to time .
3 General Portfolio B P Pitney Bowes over the years have from time to time provided us with funding
4 And these things move from time to time as well of course
5 For large , frequently repeated studies , each is the pilot for its successor but , on the other hand , changes militate against comparability over time .
6 These assets change from time to time in the ordinary course of business .
7 Some fees change from time to time : an account of fees at the time of going to press might be misleading .
8 The demands arise from the particular tasks that lexicographers undertake from time to time , and are predictable only in overall terms .
9 Although most of this chapter has been given over to an exposition of the policy inefficacy proposition which was grounded in the aggregate demand-aggregate supply framework where variations in the absolute price level figure prominently , the reader should note that many new classical writers simply take it for granted that , in a competitive economy , markets clear on average over time .
10 The rates appropriate to these allowances vary from time to time , but the councillor will be informed of any change by the Council 's Chief Financial Officer .
11 ‘ our paths cross from time to time , when we have a client in common .
12 But doctors and nurses do from time to time brush aside the protests of aged , dying or mentally affected patients .
13 Revolutions occur from time to time in nearly every field of science , and I believe that such a revolution is occurring in medicine — largely through the impact of complementary medicine .
14 But this issue has not been the subject of legislation , nor previously been considered by this court or the House of Lords , and in such circumstances the alternatives are either to dismiss the appeal despite the relevance of article 10 and wait for Parliament to reconsider the state of the law ; or , as the courts have from time to time demonstrated their ability and willingness to do , venture into relatively unchartered waters and declare the present state of the law .
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