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

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1 the Wailers are so out of time , they 're all just like is just so slow it 's just like exactly the same but like about twenty times slower .
2 She was momentarily back in time to when she was about thirteen , staying up to watch the glitter and excitement that the sight of one man had brought , watching every televised re-run as the whole country had gasped and applauded a young Spaniard whose handsome arrogance and amazing equestrian skills had held them enthralled .
3 The notice of appeal ( just out of time ) was dated 2 January 1992 .
4 Away back in time or maybe what your
5 Did your grandparents mention any other parts of the glen that used to used away back in time that are just ruins now ?
6 So homework has n't , always in on time , okay that 's very brave cos you know that 's the death penalty hand , having hand , what do I do when , when you do n't hand homework in ?
7 This particular exercise can be done in many ways , always up to time , always with the first part of the sentence unchanged , although the second part is different :
8 Remember — always the entire sentence and always up to time .
9 The ancestor of most dolphins is not clear ( although this is a very active field of research at present ) , and with further work the records of most groups probably will be extended further back in time .
10 Given that the rituals of circumcision and menstrual taboo , like the other blood rituals , would appear to have derived at least in their final form from the trauma of the exile to Babylon and the consequent restructuring of the Jewish community , we shall need to start our historical survey some centuries further back in time in order to locate and appreciate the profound changes which occurred in and around the sixth century BC .
11 To understand the Rottweiler lineage , it is necessary to go even further back in time .
12 Although the word aromatherapy was coined in the 1920s by the French chemist René Gattefossé , first we shall aim the historical telescope much further back in time to The Beginning .
13 Looking beyond these , and hence further back in time , ISO may ‘ see ’ the birth of galaxies soon after the big bang , something ground-based infrared astronomers have sought years .
14 THE TWO other landmarks we visit , while dodging a giant Madonna billboard , go even further back in time than the others .
15 A common agricultural policy had been on the agenda of Europe ever since Sicco Mansholt had put forward an early version to the Council of Europe in 1950 , though its roots lay further back in time in a series of discussions sponsored by the European Movement .
16 Common sense ( or observation ) may show that the pattern of behaviour requires the forecaster to give progressively less weight to values the further back in time they occur .
17 Birth , marriage and death certificates each contain information that enables the researcher to take another step further back in time .
18 Well , according to designers showing their collections for next autumn on the Paris runways this week , it 's going even further back in time .
19 The Author has taken this one crash and delved deeply back in time to reveal the stories of 25 pilots that are known to have flown this particular Spitfire .
20 On the 1st May an odd selection of individuals , myself included , set out to travel not only South to Totnes Castle , but also back in time about 530 years .
21 When we look out in space ( and hence back in time ) to a redshift of 2 to 3 , we do indeed see a lot of quasars .
22 The complete absence of windows gave the room a sense of being right out of time and place , abetted by the bland neon lighting and acoustics which made everyone 's voices sound flat and small .
23 It has had for its end the production of a convincing explanation of the writer 's understanding of the origin of the Created God , that is , a God that man can endow with recognisable origins to be found far back in time and with qualities from which the desire to have an absolute standard of human behaviour can ultimately be evolved .
24 In the ordinary case , the breach of a promise to do something by a certain time can for practical purposes be remedied by the thing being done , even out of time
25 Beautifully out of time , they proved that all the paranoia which surrounds those seeking to hitch a ride on the next bandwagon is worthless .
26 Naturally , if one goes farther back in time the evidence becomes more shaky , but nevertheless there apparently were reversals in late Permian and late Cretaceous times which coincide with the two most important extinction levels .
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