Example sentences of "at [art] [adj] [noun] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 The right CHEMICAL is applied with the correct EQUIPMENT at the optimum TEMPERATURE with TIME to function so reducing physical WORK
2 There are relevant stair er Chairman which you can look out of place at the present moment of time but they will need to be addressed at some point in time in the future and therefore one could be forgiven for wanting to prioritise various but in general terms , the strategy that has been er looked at is the progress of St Albans in general , there may be small elements of it and some of these have already touched upon but in general that is no sound strategy er which over a period of time and in the process of that it will be essential to monitor erm the effect of some of the changes as you go forward to see in fact whether the other elements of strategy that were erm put in to that er work were in fact still necessary and whether they should be have some .
3 In November Nizan correctly assessed the situation when he commented : " At the present moment in time , the policies of the fascist government are being thwarted only by the diplomacy of the USSR and the heroic resistance of the Spanish people " .
4 At the present point in time there are those who are of the opinion that no sacrifice is too great for our democracy , least of all the sacrifice of democracy itself to the power of the judges and enslaving legal limitations .
5 And the the boat going underneath just er at the right sort of time .
6 Gosse was perplexed at the vast tracts of time required by geologists to account for the deposition of all the strata .
7 And now that I thought about it , I had vaguely wondered at the ‘ good time ’ I had made on my walk from the cottage , and at the leisurely stretch of time I had had on the island .
8 Both his father and his grandfather Moses Harris [ q.v. ] were artists ; the younger John Harris exhibited at the Royal Academy from time to time between 1810 and 1834 .
9 Across the emptying room another hurt mind had been at the same moment of time glanced by unwanted evocations of shabby Forest sheep nudging together in a brick shelter on a high road through the trees .
10 Most countries organize censuses of their population on something like ten-yearly intervals , but not all do , and they certainly do not do them at the same point in time .
11 ‘ Concurrent validity ’ ( C3 ) is the agreement between the test scores and some criterion measure at the same point in time , while ‘ predictive validity ’ ( P ) refers to the agreement between test scores and some criterion measure obtained sometime later .
12 However , to suggest to a parent that an assessment should start at the same point in time as the children are prepared for removal to a long-term placement , does not enable an open and honest working relationship .
13 The updating of all " persons ' files will remain a central responsibility to ensure they are kept at the same point in time .
14 Because comparison is generally more important in science than the determination of an absolute value , we are generally involved in observing either the same sample at two different points of time between which X occurs , or two different samples at the same point in time , only one having been subjected to X.
15 Saxe-Weimar had arrived at the very nick of time .
16 If terms like ‘ affective psychosis ’ , ‘ schizophrenia ’ and ‘ schizoaffective disorder ’ have a use , therefore , it is merely as labels of convenience , as shorthand descriptors of the flavour of a given individual 's form of insanity — and even then often only at a certain point in time and subject to qualifications as to the severity of disability .
17 But now Chambers insisted that the extensions to growth took place without supernatural interference , so that one species naturally transmuted itself into a higher one at a certain point in time .
18 When a challenge has not , at a certain point in time , been countered by a riposte , then the person who has suffered injury has come under the symbolic power of the challenger .
19 From the architectural viewpoint the greatest importance of this site , now so excellently opened up and preserved , is that it has preserved for us a provincial Roman city at a certain point in time — A.D. 79 — so that we can see for ourselves the buildings in which such citizens of the empire lived .
20 However , just as at a certain place on the earth 's surface we can still call ‘ down' ’ the direction towards the centre of the earth , so a living organism that finds itself in such a world at a certain period of time can define the ‘ direction ’ of time as going from the less probable state to the more probable ( the former will be the ‘ Past' ’ and the latter the ‘ Future' ’ ) and by virtue of the definition he will find that his own small region , isolated from the rest of the universe , is ‘ initially' ’ always in an improbable state .
21 It was an appointment , as William Adam pointed out , which ‘ often follows at a great distance of time after the application & entring on the list ’ .
22 People within enterprises who are designated to engage in environmental scanning ( and similar ) activities do not of course restrict themselves to that part of the total external information resource that happens to be publicly available at a specific point in time .
23 They are processes which , once started , end up producing a particular outcome at a later point in time .
24 The respondent 's answers constitute the raw material to be analysed at a later point in time .
25 " The development of our lives is predetermined from the beginning by our family situation and the structure of society at a given moment in time . "
26 As a result , Areas of Interest Maps represent little more than a statement of intent at a given moment in time by BC .
27 Synchronic study , on the other hand , considers how a language functions as a system at a given moment in time , analyzing the simultaneous relationships between its constituent parts ; it examines how a language works , not how it develops .
28 The prevalence of a state is defined as the proportion of a population so categorized at a given point of time regardless of when those affected entered the state .
29 The CGT , for instance , has regarded collective bargaining as no more than a temporary measure of the balance of power between management and unions , enabling the union to obtain the best negotiating results for wage-earners at a given point in time ( Goetschy , 1983 ) .
30 The models are usually formulated as ‘ one-shot games ‘ : firms are making their choices relative to market and cost conditions at a given point in time as if there were no past and no future .
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