Example sentences of "time it [verb] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It harked back to the world of the fourth- and fifth-century Christian emperors ; at the same time it signalled a new world of money-using economic agents including peasants and small-scale traders . |
2 | Another arcade adventure based on a film but at least this time it bears a little relevance to the subject matter . |
3 | In time it forms a substantial clump of green leaves above which , in summer , are carried rich yellow daisy heads on branching stems . |
4 | This plan should be regularly updated as the design evolves so that at any moment in time it represents the best forecast of the final cost of the project . |
5 | At the same time it afforded a public opportunity for emulation in what Veblen would have termed conspicuous waste . |
6 | At the same time it launched an ideological offensive launched to justify this approach to solving the crisis . |
7 | This time it took no formal action . |
8 | The church began in 1974 under the leadership of Roger Forster and grew to a congregation of 250 by 1980 , since which time it experienced a rapid growth to a 1985 membership of over 1000 people meeting in fifteen different congregations and by 1990 this growth reached over 1700 adult members , not including children , meeting in thirty-three different congregations . |
9 | She had joined the course at her parents ' insistence and while it was n't her idea of fun at the time it seemed a better alternative than being behind a typewriter . |
10 | But it does not appear to have been regularly employed in the Royal Chancery until the last quarter of the ninth century , from which time it became a fixed element in diplomas . ’ |
11 | But in its time it represented a real advance . |
12 | Over time it makes the domestic industry less competitive . |
13 | By the time it hits a distant screen , this ion-image has expanded millions of times . |
14 | It was an historic statute since for the first time it provided a statutory power for the banning of marches and processions of protest and demonstration . |
15 | This refers to a process whereby a child is rewarded every time it completes a desirable behaviour . |
16 | By the time it published the first issue of its bulletin , STOP , in February 1980 the DUC had effectively changed from being an information and research group into an opposition group , as the bulletin made clear : ‘ After investigation into the hazards related to uranium and its by-products , the DUC feels that since uranium can not be mined safely , exploration should cease . ’ |
17 | 1991 saw total Unix systems revenue in Europe climb to $6.9bn from $6bn in 1990. 1991 's growth of 15% is two points up on 1990 's 13% — IDC predicts a mean compound annual growth rate ( CAGR ) of 14% for the next six years , by which time it believes the European market will be worth some $16.3bn . |
18 | the same time it seems an awful kind of dangerous way |
19 | This requires the bolide to be extremely underdense ( m 0.01gcm -3 ) by the time it enters the upper atmosphere . |
20 | When the orbital period is plotted as a function of time it shows a steady decrease : . |