Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] a time " in BNC.

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1 The new Act abolished the old method of arranging with creditors by a deed of composition , assignment or otherwise ‘ which has for so long a time disgraced our law ’ .
2 So much peace and plenty , for so long a time .
3 It was , wrote the best-known and most influential of them , the Abbe de Saint-Pierre , ‘ that vain Idol to which the Nations have Sacrificed so blindly , so fruitlessly , and for so long a Time , so much Blood and Treasure ’ .
4 I mean , after so long a time .
5 So short a time ago they had found and shared a grassy path in a brief Eden of summerblue skies , tapestry green and flowered meadows , every day a delight , the world a beautiful old master cleaned in the zephyr of Lucy 's being .
6 One might well ask what has happened to transform the public mood from complacency to crisis in so short a time .
7 This is a tremendous response in so short a time .
8 Sceptics doubt the influence of the press , however , and especially whether it could have so much influence in so short a time .
9 It is particularly impressive that she was able to win such a prestigious commendation after so short a time in journalism .
10 Was it because he had no hope that he had lasted so short a time ?
11 Since Brusilov had not concentrated his troops in any one area , nor made tactical probes , and since the artillery bombardment lasted so short a time , the Austrians had no inkling of his intentions .
12 Despite all the obvious practical difficulties that Edward encountered in maintaining the siege , its abandonment after so short a time must raise questions about the extent of his commitment , even at this stage of the war , to the French throne .
13 Therefore , if the origin of the phenomenon is as recent as the late eighteenth century , it is difficult to explain how it could have become so geographically widespread in so short a time : it was already highly salient and overtly stigmatized by the latter half of the nineteenth century ( for some citations see Phillipps , 1984 , 136–9 ) .
14 It was a triumph of planning in so short a time for so complicated a matter , most of it carried through in most places within a year or two years of the passing of the act .
15 If the interval during which he kept his eyes closed was very short , say one second , he could maintain that we could not have exchanged our places in so short a time and invoke the laws of physics in support of his view .
16 So much change , in so short a time ; Pete felt as if he 'd aged more in ten weeks than in the ten years that had gone before .
17 I would remember , against my will , the fragrance of coffee and hot bread , the energy that had possessed me so short a time ago , when I had felt supple as an eel , as powerful as a salmon , as sure and quiet and graceful as an owl .
18 So short a time ago ?
19 I suppose the defendant thought he had some benefit ; at any rate , there is a detriment to the plaintiff from his parting with the possession for even so short a time .
20 So short a time , Charlotte realised with a shock , that he could not possibly have returned home in the meantime , since he was a close neighbour of the Bodens , who lived ten miles from Aurae Phiala .
21 Strange , she had been in Denmark for so short a time yet in those few days she had learned so much , not only about herself but about a country she had never even considered visiting before Suzie 's escapade .
22 How could she have possibly imagined how dramatically her feelings towards him would have changed in so short a time ?
23 And here she is , so short a time after , widowed and childless , with nothing gained and much lost .
24 I knew her so short a time . ’
25 Could one fall in love in so short a time ?
26 Rarely can there have been so many upheavals in the landscape in so short a time .
27 The authors are indeed to be congratulated on producing such a clear and authoritative treatment of their subject in so short a time .
28 The government was unwilling to comply within so short a time , however , because it relied upon the rural vote , and farmers had demonstrated twice in 1989 against the level of agricultural imports .
29 ‘ My collections , I am happy to say ’ he wrote , despite his own and prince 's fears , ‘ have all arrived in safety and I can now scarcely tell how so large a mass was got together in so short a time . ’
30 What seemed so dreadful was that he waited so long for the Premiership , and held it for so short a time
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