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

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1 The right politician must be put in charge of the Treasury to bring the economy back to even keel , reduce the trade deficit and force both inflation and interest rates down in time for the next election .
2 Most of the away fans would make it down in time for the game and little else .
3 Putting the bid together in time for the mid-December deadline has meant a £2 million outlay on LASMO 's part .
4 The speech came over the wires so late and the sheets were so confused by the Post Office — which is usual in these cases — that without the precis we could not possibly have got the leader through in time for the first edition .
5 Well I wa I was n't sure whether to , whether it would go through in time for the case and that 's why I have n't
6 Well I wa I was n't sure whether to whether it would come through in time for the case That 's why I did n't
7 Peter McEnery and Dorothy Tutin ( above ) play the middle-aged ex-lovers who iron out the wrinkles and get together just in time for the final curtain .
8 They were back at Mrs Parvis 's just in time for the evening meal .
9 Stockboker Ellis & Partners used Saturday 's programme to offer fans a low-cost chance to buy Cabra shares until April 16 — just in time for the Cabra meeting .
10 19 pairs of racing shoes just in time for the season
11 He would do it tonight , Friday , just in time for the weekly trip to the supermarket .
12 The Gutenberg Galaxy was the invention of the printing press which came just in time for the Reformation .
13 Just in time for the locusts and honey ! ’ .
14 I received it , along with her idea for making a Christmas fairy , just in time for the festive season and I 'm pleased to say that I made my fairy thanks to Mrs Sall and the post office .
15 FALLEN star Arazi missed his chance to shine again at Longchamp yesterday , but Henry Cecil got back among the big winners just in time for the St Leger .
16 Kodak has announced a new ‘ Ektachrome ’ 400X Professional Film which combines a warm colour balance , ideal for cool scenes and white backgrounds , with high speed action shots just in time for the Winter Olympics in Albertville .
17 Apparently it has been similar to the crew of a huge tanker somewhere on the high seas sailing hither and tither no doubt , for four long years after setting out , and returning just in time for the recent elections .
18 You 're just in time for the toast to Annabelle .
19 Kodak has announced a new ‘ Ektachrome ’ 400X Professional Film which combines a warm colour balance , ideal for cool scenes and white backgrounds , with high speed action shots — just in time for the Winter Olympics in Albertville .
20 Dexter arrived back at Scotland Yard just in time for the press conference .
21 But I think er with a big family like mother had got , she used to like her divi day erm for erm you know , well say save up , well it used to come round about May and you 'd think well just , you know just in time for the summer shoes or something you know .
22 ‘ Ten o'clock , Inspector , just in time for the news and cocoa . ’
23 It was then laid just in time for the Royal Opening .
24 Then they relax so that the ear returns to maximal sensitivity just in time for the returning echo .
25 She was just in time for the tail end of the early evening news , and her attention was immediately caught .
26 I passed my driving test just in time for the holidays .
27 Meanwhile , back in the 20th century , Liverpool 's new HMV shop opened yesterday — just in time for the Christmas shopping .
28 Wives also chose afternoons : the bulk of the outside work and the housework being finished they could attend knowing they would arrive home in time for the children returning from school .
29 The judge knew this man of old : he was the pit-bull of the legal profession , attacking any weak spots with devastating precision , and seeing him ended the Judge 's faint glimmer of hope that he might just get home in time for the football .
30 Gradually a long lie on a Saturday comes to mean rising at 5 p.m. in time for the Brookside omnibus , your rucksack quietly grows grey mouldy bits at the back of a dark cupboard , and The Face seems more interesting than Tom Weir 's ‘ My Month ’ .
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