Example sentences of "[prep] [art] time on " in BNC.

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1 What you want is to find yourself slim and attractive after a time on an easy , satisfying diet .
2 The dog may well overcome its initial fear , and start to feed after a time on its own .
3 It is true to say that the only overweight animals are those cared for by humans who take more notice of the time on the clock than of natural feelings of hunger .
4 In the Roman Empire , this ambivalence was demonstrated by the important role played by senior citizens , on the one hand , and their cruel subjection to the literary satire of the time on the other .
5 Because Revson just did a small number of American races and spent the rest of the time on the FI circuit .
6 But Cadle cares for English basketball enough to have stayed here for 10 years — most of the time on a budget even Norman Lamont could manage .
7 He spent most of the time on the phone with his bookie .
8 Much of the time on the screen he wanders around helplessly in a freshly starched little Dior number looking for a line worth saying .
9 Musical chat shows : This type of programme fills the majority of the time on local radio .
10 We spent most of the time on the planet acid : the best place for us to be .
11 We spent most of the time on the Thames and Medway keeping observations on shipping .
12 I was dancing much of the time on the wedding day .
13 Sales are somewhere in between since although there is a structured sales department , individual salesmen operate much of the time on their own .
14 He is now writing a follow-up and wants to include others reminiscences of the time on topics such as rationing , the black-out , evacuation , all forms of civilian war service , the Home Guard , and more !
15 Putting out a hand to pick up her brush , intending to try to do something about her limp blonde hair , Laura gave a yelp of dismay as she caught sight of the time on her wrist-watch .
16 I 've had a hell of a time on this tour , you know .
17 My father made me attend evening lectures for a time on sound , light , and heat — with no effect . ’
18 Hahnemann therefore had to move frequently as restrictions on his practice were imposed in one town after another , but despite this he lectured for a time on homoeopathy in the University of Leipzig and he had a large band of influential patrons and supporters as well as a number of able and gifted pupils .
19 Ken Wolstenholme was never really lost to football after he left the Beeb and he commentated for a time on ITV 's Tyne Tees station and recently worked for Tottenham 's Clubcall line .
20 Only a few places , like the Pool of Virkie at the south end of Shetland , attract waders for a time on migration , and most of them move on to richer pastures for the water .
21 This means it can tolerate an actual break in supply because it will run for a time on the batteries .
22 LURGAN residents may lose their water supply for a time on Sunday due to essential maintenance work .
23 The time recorded on two different watches , for example , can be perfectly associated : the time on one of them can be correctly predicted from the time on the other , but not because the time on one of them causes the time on the other ; altering the time on one of them would have absolutely no impact on the other .
24 PRS and Patrick Eggle have revived this fashion , which was predominant once upon a time on Gibson 's ES345/355 models .
25 Geoclock UK is a shareware program that shows a coloured map of the earth together with the time and date ( which is based on the time on your PC 's clock ) .
26 Geoclock UK is a shareware program that shows a coloured map of the earth together with the time and date ( which is based on the time on your PC 's clock ) .
27 This means that in the wind conditions as in fig 30 , you will have little to no time on the inbound track .
28 In 1958 , Reginald Bassett lamented the fact ‘ that no study of the General Election of 1931 was made at the time on the lines of the extremely useful studies of the 1945 and subsequent General Elections sponsored by Nuffield College ’ .
29 Despite the initial support of the boycott by international operatic stars — most of whom were at the time on contract to work with him — Barneboim 's case did not excite much public sympathy in France .
30 The point is , you see , that I did not ask you to go and look at the time on that clock ; I merely asked you to study the numerals on it .
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