Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [adj] time " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I do hope everything 's all right this time . ’ |
2 | Instead of the moment being one of passion and desire , his mind is often filled with such thoughts as ‘ I hope it does n't happen again' and ‘ Please let it be all right this time ’ . |
3 | ‘ I 'm sure it 's all right this time , but you should n't carry anything heavier than a handbag — that 's what my old love used to say . |
4 | ‘ I managed all right last time , ’ she reminded him . |
5 | It will be all right next time . ’ |
6 | Then Jack heard the shuffling , rustling sound again ; it was much louder this time and more urgent . |
7 | The rumbling and creaking returned , much louder this time . |
8 | The other table what we had before was better , was no much so much time involved , by the time you 'd screw them round and turn 'em , to saw them into blocks there was a lot of time involved in it . |
9 | Make a list of any activities which make you buzz with energy , which absorb you so much that time dissolves , or which give you a sense of inner peace and satisfaction . |
10 | She 's arranged so much this time . ’ |
11 | Only so much time is available in the classroom . |
12 | Well yes there 's only only this time of the year that they 're about so I think they must only grow them there that make the best marmalade . |
13 | Nobody expects much better this time . |
14 | Although Rhys has now been offered treatment in Bristol , subject to ethical approval and a suitable donor being forthcoming , ‘ valuable , perhaps literally vital time has been lost ’ . |
15 | So just enough time to catch your breath before we start again . |
16 | This would have resulted in a much more enjoyable time for everyone . |
17 | WC apps : 9 Winners : 1930 , 1950 If they really have got their act together and manage to cut out the cynical stuff , Uruguay could achieve much more this time . |
18 | Mrs Barzach will have a much more difficult time retaining her seat in the 15th arrondissement of Paris , which she has represented for only the past three years and where she is standing against the well-established local RPR mayor ( and deputy mayor of the capital ) . |
19 | Happily , we lived in a much more enlightened time during World War 2 , I never understood the treatment of LMF cases ; it was something I could not understand as outlined in the Air Ministry Order , which was a very harsh document and did not give much leeway in the treatment of a chap if he felt he could not do any more . |
20 | And eel-fishing looked much harder this time , the silver-grey often returning to its den empty-handed . |
21 | And erm , we hardly got to see as much of each other , because we were like , in this group of ten people , and then , and so like one time we skied off piste , and we just had this massive snowball fight off piste , it was like really funny . |
22 | When she 'd poured the tea she said she must go out soon — " It gets dark so early this time of year " — and started to potter about the room getting dressed . |
23 | The tremolo is especially worthy of note : it is extremely smooth in operation and although it detuned slightly when used in real anger , it settled in more each time I played it . |
24 | I planned my campaign so carefully this time . ’ |
25 | It took only slightly less time for her to remember there were no pillows in the sleeping-bag . |
26 | It seemed about par for the course , so I applied , was interviewed and then offered the job , all in reasonably quick time . |
27 | Yet each time that third line came round the tune seemed to gather itself up and find new energy from somewhere , and perhaps it did n't fall quite so far each time in the fourth , and Tabitha was captivated despite herself , watching the pretty man play and wondering how he would end it , how he could ever resolve the disagreement between the rush and the ebb , until she realized suddenly that he had , with a quiet , lilting little rill that ran up and then down and flicked its tail and was gone . |
28 | We shall become poor men , nomads who possess nothing , just wandering minds who spend only as much time as is needed on our physical affairs and then depart free men . |
29 | The walk to Paddington was a comparatively short one and , slow as we were , we accomplished it in fairly quick time . |
30 | You thinned it down though last time did n't you ? |