Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] [verb] [prep] [art] time " in BNC.

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1 The Commander-in-Chief in Scotland was Lieutenant-General Sir John Cope , later the subject of a derisory song ‘ Hey , Johnny Cope ’ , and unkindly described at the time as ‘ a little , dressy , finical [ i.e. fussy ] man ’ .
2 Thus the child learns to heed the warning and so do without the time out .
3 The American Adventure opens at 10.00am and closes between 5.00pm and 7.00pm depending on the time of year .
4 This tough and challenging rural course finishes with a series of hills , which seem to grow steeper and more demanding as the time to challenge them comes around .
5 The fortress at Silves has a courtyard that was lined and pinned and partly excavated by the time we arrived in the pouring rain to look at it .
6 On leaving school Herbert joined his father as an engineering apprentice , and also worked for a time in the mechanical engineering laboratories of the City and Guilds Technical College in Finchley , London .
7 So deep was the division on the " entrist tactic " that the unified body reached the compromise of working within the Labour Party for a period and then withdrawing for a time and continuing independent activity .
8 ‘ I want to see you washed and almost dried by the time I come down .
9 As outlined earlier , Tiger and Fox suggest that there is an innate ‘ male bonding ’ stemming from millions of years ' history and ultimately linked to a time when men co-operated in order to hunt .
10 These price and cost interrelations were not well and explicitly understood at the time , and it is perhaps anachronistic to criticise the industry for not adopting them .
11 But just think about the time involved .
12 There is a real possibility that the newcomer is not only exhausted but possibly wounded by the time he has won the harem .
13 It would seem obvious that at least some of those practitioners had not in fact vanished at all , but still existed at the time of the Crusades .
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