Example sentences of "[adv] [noun] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 Disney has a good record on bringing in projects on time , and there is a great deal of faith in the Eurodisney management .
2 The rest will pay down part of Time Warner 's $16 billion mountain of debt .
3 Will I have a good enough share of time if I allow myself to listen first and tell second ?
4 This is the distinctive method of instruction at Oxford , and it is extremely prodigal of time .
5 When used with the bare infinitive , it denotes a direct experiencing of , and so contemporaneity in time with , an occurrence and can often be replaced by see — although it denotes perception in a more abstract way than the latter — or by have in its experiential sense : ( 93 ) Rather surprised to find them break fence at this season .
6 The process of experimentation , he adds , should narrow down flexibilities over time .
7 The overall training plan is coordinated by myself ( Chief Administrative and Training Officer ) , approximately 50% of time in training and development , and the training sub-committee , whose members change regularly , drawn from all members of staff ’ ,
8 The timetable must be formal and actual , i.e. dealing with dates not periods of time .
9 I do n't like it when presentation screens are multiloaded before each level though — that 's just waste of time , and there 's certainly no excuse for it in a game like Sly Spy .
10 The time taken to complete one revolution of the Earth is decreasing over aeons of time but at the moment it is , give or take the odd second , 24 hours ; this defines the solar day .
11 Time was made for man , not man for time .
12 The Lord has won a victory over my feelings in this area although there are still skirmishes from time to time !
13 This allows borrowers more scope to time issues so as to take advantage of temporarily favourable patterns of interest rates such as would permit profitable swaps .
14 For natural selection acts by either now adapting the various parts of each being to its conditions of life , or by having adapted them during long past periods of time ’ .
15 I just , it 's just a sort of an idea at this stage , I 'm not wanting to take up ogres of time on this , but
16 Erm , now what you do with this , these sections is of course you build up information over time .
17 Weekends are also useful in breaking up stretches of time into more manageable portions .
18 examines both fluctuations over time in employment , hours and productivity and the industrial pattern of response to fluctuations in demand ;
19 in his lordship 's judgment , both as a matter of principle and policy the court j should not extend the duty to those who were mere bystanders or witnesses of Y horrific events unless there was sufficient degree of proximity , which required both nearness in time and place and a close relationship of love and affection between plaintiff and victim .
20 Will you agree that we do that , rather than have the same thing coming up time after time .
21 Time : intervals 47 per cent worked out length of time for a train journey ( p.64 ) .
22 But what gets left out time after time are the experiences of the rest of the team — the men and women at every level of the company whose contributions to the company created the success that the CEO so eagerly claims .
23 Once you have found such a spot you can go back time after time and take fish .
24 Even money from time to time .
25 Notice that periodic waves that are even functions of time , that is , symmetric about the time origin , can be represented by a constant and just cosine waves , while waves that are odd functions of time , that is , reversed in sign about the time origin , can be represented by just sine waves .
26 See , it 's very easy to get confused between distance against time , speed against time , and even acceleration against time .
27 He said : ‘ The reception , professional way the meetings are organised and the help we receive from the local authority makes us return here time after time .
28 ‘ It is a capacity which has obviously helped us survive as a species over thousands of years , and medical staff see evidence of it even today time after time , ’ said intensive care specialist Sally Ford .
29 The model to this point has assumed fixed factor prices , an assumption that might apply to a small open economy ( although even then constancy over time is unlikely ) , but that in a closed economy leaves out of account the general equilibrium effects discussed in earlier Lectures .
30 Alternatively , a separate provision can be included in the terms indicating how periods of time are to be calculated .
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