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

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1 OLDHAM keeper Jon Hallworth is facing an anxious battle to be fit in time for Saturday 's big Premier League kick-off .
2 CLIFTONVILLE midfielder Shaun Strang looks likely to be fit in time for Saturday 's TNT Gold Cup clash with Newry .
3 Johnny Jamieson picked up a first half knock in the 2– defeat by Portadown but he is expected to be fit in time for Saturday .
4 Now he faces an uphill struggle to be fit in time for the British Clubman 's championship a series he had hoped to win this season .
5 I began to think she would be worthy in time of being my mistress , which till now I had been a little scrupulous about .
6 With such a variety of similar instruments and competitive rates it is difficult and costly in time for all participants to know exactly the best terms and rates .
7 The project , presented by the Minister for Culture and Education , Jack Lang , and adopted by the Cabinet on 26 August , should be operational in time for the exhibition ‘ The century of Titian : from Giorgione to Veronese ’ scheduled at Paris 's Grand Palais from 20 February to 31 May 1993 .
8 But re-election by the International Amateur Athletic Federation must be carried at the IAAF meeting at Tokyo in August to be effective in time for 1992 .
9 33. in time of the warp
10 We have it too ( 8 ) that the circumstance ( whose constituents need not be simultaneous ) is prior in time to the effect .
11 It 's best to try to memorise all this in small sections — say , six to eight notes at a time — until you can play each complete scale pattern ascending and descending in thirds in time with a metronome .
12 TFC 's Chief Engineer , Peter Rushen , told Flypast that repair and rectification work on the aircraft will now take place during the winter months and that the P-38 will be fully airworthy in time for the 1993 airshow season .
13 Often the emphasis on shared values has been at its greatest in time of war or other national crisis .
14 He was so moved by the sufferings of the wounded at the battle of Solferino ( the Lombard village where the French and Sardinians defeated the Austrians in June 1859 ) that he published a book urging the formation of permanent voluntary aid societies to succour the wounded in time of war , and this so caught international imagination that in 1863 , sixteen European nations met at a conference in Geneva to launch the plan .
15 No doubt he 'll get it right in time for his second edition ; if there is one .
16 During this little confab I have left Rainbow standing on the edge of the dancefloor , adrift in a daydream , with her hands in her pockets , and that nice chunky backside of hers bouncing in time to the music .
17 Voters do not instinctively turn to Labour in time of trouble .
18 The family bond is important in time of war .
19 Will the right hon. Gentleman give a commitment that capital will be made available in time for the accident and emergency unit to be completed and ready to receive patients when Westminster hospital closes ?
20 If the exact figures are not available in time for the Council meeting , a full breakdown will be included in the Spring 1993 Council report .
21 Er , sir , at the risk of straying slightly into into two B , you , do forgive me in advance , but you raised the specific point about size , and and erm there was er one or two statements that there is n't a a clear view on size in P P G three , I think it 's important to bear in mind the interrelationship between all P P G s and as Mr Curtis said , the research that that backs them up , and I I I point you to three quotes in the statement that C P R E have put in , erm i i i paragraph four point one seven , an and s the quote that attaches to that is taken from the research that erm er backs up draft revised P P G thirteen , transport , and erm I shall quote from that on this question of size , i it is also evident that smaller settlements , those with populations of less than fifty thousand , but particularly very small settlements are characteristically less transport emissions efficient than larger settlements , I think the the erm essence of of that particular piece of research is not as Mr Davis was implying to achieve totally self contained settlements , I do n't believe such a concept exists , it 's actually erm a planning land use in the long term to reduce C O two emi emissions something that is essential now to government policy , I think perhaps more instructive though is is the quote that I 've in included in paragraph four point one nine and that 's taken from er er this book here which I perhaps should submit the whole chapter in evidence to the panel , I 've only just included one quote , it 's it 's I suggest one of the more interesting reads that you may have as a result of this panel , it 's by Colin Ward , and it 's called New Town , Home Town , it 's undertaken by er , sorry includes some of the work that 's been undertaken by the University of Reading , erm and er David Lock Associates , on erm er new town research , and this this is due to be published by H M S O shortly , it 's unfortunate that it was n't available in time for this E I P , but I think erm , if you 'll bear with me , I will read out the quote that I put in four point one nine , because I feel that it is useful on this question of of size , we concluded that if you are interested in environmental impact , energy conser consumption , and sustainability , new settlements have to reach a certain size to be worthwhile , it 's parallel to the old arguments that used to take place around self containment in new towns , we found that new settlements of much less than five thousand houses , that 's about fourteen thousand people are not really worthwhile because if they are smaller than that you are simply putting a housing estate in the countryside , a phrase that that has already been put round this morning , it appears that the best minimum for a new settlement , the best minimum , is about ten thousand houses , that 's that 's twenty five thousand people , which as it happens is about the size of the original garden cities .
22 This meant that a high proportion of the manpower of many European navies was available in time of peace for use in the civilian economy .
23 Tenure differences may become sharper in time as the proportion of households in each tenure changes .
24 Many large firms will have official anti-discrimination policies , although the personnel management at local level may practice discrimination , perhaps avoiding hiring black workers or laying them off first in time of recession .
25 Applicants must submit their financial plans by December 1 in time for the International Cricket Council to make a firm decision by the end of January .
26 The new car was rolled out on March 31 1982 in time for the retirement of its designer , Chief Engineer Stuart Pillar .
27 These are , first , the process risk by which a person with brain failure is likely to become increasingly self-neglectful and disordered in time with reduced skills to cope .
28 You will note that the criteria for these usable answers describe antecedents and consequences that are very close in time to the problem behaviours and can possibly be changed .
29 Are regularly close in time to the problem behaviour .
30 Paul Scott 's Raj Quartet , a fictional foursome collected in 1976 and with the pendant of a fifth novel , Staying On ( 1977 ) , is a vast canvas devoted to the transfer of power in India and its sequel : too close in time to be seen , altogether clearly , as historical fiction , too distant in place to be a shared world ; though like E. M. Forster before him , Scott chose an alien sun to define the outlines and shadows of the English abroad , where their habits of mind look all the sharper , odder and more endearing against the background of an exotic land .
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