Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 Now I Goggles on time folks .
2 Yes she belongs to time not long past .
3 She lives in time : Hugo and myself out of it .
4 A World Apart is , ‘ despite ’ its author 's socialism , a ‘ deeply religious book ’ , in which she has at times the sense of ‘ a man talking to God ’ .
5 A further , characteristically modern variation on the pseudo-autobiographical or confessional novel is the interior monologue , as used in James Joyce 's Ulysses , where the reader eavesdrops , as it were , on the actual thoughts and sensations of the character as he or she moves through time and space .
6 ‘ This is immensely interesting , ’ he murmurs from time to time .
7 When the Folin is channelled through such a " funnel " as the south-north troughs of the Ticino and Reuss river valleys which form the " Gotthard Route " , it develops at times a violence that is awe-inspiring , and with such suddenness that alpine lakes such as this one have shore-based warning " flashers " at strategic points to let navigators know when a storm is imminent .
8 Finally , it is important to note that however tight an exclusion clause may be , it will not prevent the introduction of new fiduciary duties into the relationship between firm and customer as it develops over time .
9 It seems that there are well-defined laws that govern how the universe and everything in it develops in time .
10 ‘ Souness has inherited the biggest mess at Anfield that I can remember and in trying to get himself out of it he has at times become even more bogged down .
11 He counts in time with each step : one-two-three-four , following a pace behind Babur .
12 The mapping of this input , as it unfolds across time , onto other domains such as semantics will then be studied .
13 Rather than wait until a discourse is finished , and then analyse it as a whole , from outside and with the benefit of hindsight , the ethnomethodologists try to understand how it unfolds in time .
14 The search for training which fits this description in the management of education is hindered in two ways : it has long been an area for tension between theorists and practitioners and it has from time to time been exposed to management models from fields where practice and purpose are very different from those of education .
15 And he 's prepared to make ‘ harsh decisions ‘ to ensure he gets the return he wants in time for Saturday 's League match against Southampton at The Dell .
16 ‘ Ferkin ell , ’ he says , in a special humorous artificial voice which he uses from time to time with Phil , to ward off jokes he has not entirely understood .
17 This is that B 's letter is a nullity even if it arrives on time .
18 Make sure it arrives in time to be included in the next issue .
19 ( He allows from time to time that it is also concerned with the quality , bad , but bad takes a decidedly second place in his discussions . )
20 It acts in time of trouble .
21 ‘ I do n't need that kind of restriction on my playing , and I 've done it loads of times in the past when recording , always having to think , ‘ Well , I ca n't play the F£ there ; I 'll have to go down and play it there . ’
22 The constant dangers and perplexities that beset John Kemp arise from the ferocious enmity of O'Brien , whose hatred of anything English is increased by his hopeless love for the Don 's daughter Seraphina , for whose sake he moderates from time to time his evil power over the old aristocrat .
23 However , the criminal law is not fixed and static , it varies over time and from area to area .
24 It seems at times to dwell excessively and inaccurately on the ineffectiveness of the English resistance ( see below ) , and is likely for the 990s at least to be at best a partial record .
25 He seems at times to be reassuring himself of his grip upon a world of his own devising .
26 There is not , as we might have expected , a simple decline in how well it remembers as time passes .
27 It changes over time , just as any language does : no one nowadays speaks in the same way as the contemporaries of Chaucer or Shakespeare or even Dickens .
28 ( You might refer to the ways in which industry can be organized over space ; to patterns and forms of uneven development ; to how it changes over time . )
29 The nature of the uncertainty present and the way it changes over time therefore becomes the focus of the framework shown in Figure 1 .
30 The way we interpret it changes with time .
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