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

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1 I wo n't be in touch with you for a time and I do n't want you starting a panic . ’
2 Mrs A. W. wrote : ‘ I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for the time and effort you have put into compiling this diet which has made a bigger difference to my weight and dimensions than any other diet I have been on … . ‘
3 ( c ) the willingness of the offeror to commit itself to the time and expense involved in a contested bid ;
4 We Was it apparent to you at the time that the wage was low ?
5 You were told at the time you did , and Councillor told you at the time that th it was totally inadequate was the children 's budget , so how can you expect more money from the Government when your sense of priorities is so blatantly wrong on the money that you 're already handling .
6 Did , did you at the time or in the thirties did you have any involvement with the Unemployment Claims Union or anything like that ?
7 It was something about the times that drugs should be so easily come by .
8 That was something at the time that I felt I did n't really need myself .
9 ‘ He chose to favour us one at a time and the others were left out in the cold .
10 If anaphors were to be resolved one at a time and left to right , nothing would yet have been done about ‘ him ’ , so the configurational contribution would be missed and reasoning would be inevitable .
11 From the beginning they took on ‘ trainees ’ in evangelism and church planting , first one at a time and then in small groups and now they run a carefully organised evangelistic training programme called Network .
12 Bring them in one at a time and show them a series of articles such as a pot , a plate , a flask and a small stool .
13 The best way to learn these modes is to take them one at a time and examine the construction of each one .
14 The remedy may change , or in acute injuries more than one remedy may be required , but in classical homoeopathy the remedies are administered one at a time and not as a mixture .
15 The Crystal Palace tram terminus was on a gradient and it was ruled that if the crew wanted to take their break there , in the busmen 's canteen round the corner on the Parade , they must go one at a time and not leave the car unattended .
16 London Transport held very strong views in favour of standardization , so when in 1936 , the ex-Croydon cars were due for an annual overhaul and relicensing , they were withdrawn one at a time and replaced by E/1 Class cars between October 1936 and January 1937 .
17 Another good face lifter is to raise the eyebrows up and down swiftly ( no holding ) one at a time and both together .
18 Send it to one at a time and be prepared to wait a good while for a reply .
19 You will have achieved very little if parents sort problems one at a time and keep coming back to you for the same advice for each one .
20 In the following text pages , each step is taken one at a time and ‘ what happened ’ and why is detailed .
21 So do you want to take e each object out one at a time and then put it on the table in the categories so you 've got one pile of bones .
22 Cold setting was carried out by selecting the characters one at a time and placing them in a compositor 's stick .
23 The Head of Department then went through the objectives one at a time and satisfied the Deputy Head ( Curriculum ) and the Director of Studies that , with different emphases , the objectives were all subsumed in the 3 criteria for the assessment of pupils ' work .
24 I just sat there , got them all out one at a time and did the whole damn lot !
25 For this reason , cards should be exchanged one at a time and with some care .
26 I only work on one at a time because I find it quite niggling if something is n't finished .
27 Cool pastry for 5mins , then beat in eggs one at a time until mixture is firm , glossy and elastic .
28 Malpass put the fingers of his right hand on the chair arm and pressed them down one at a time until all four knuckles cracked loudly .
29 The coloured boxer looked into the referee 's eyes , then watched his fingers ; he was raising them one at a time as he counted .
30 Although oxygen is a good oxidising agent ( atom or molecule that accepts electrons from the molecule it oxidises ) , restrictions on the direction of spin of the electrons it accepts means that it usually accepts these one at a time as shown in the following equations :
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