Example sentences of "[verb] [to-vb] a [adj] time " in BNC.

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1 When Pitt wants to have a good time he invites his ‘ little group of buddies ’ , including actor Dermot Mulroney — a whiz on the cello — over for an old-fashioned ‘ hootinanny ’ jam session .
2 A man gets tired of his business and his family , and he wants to have a good time .
3 I want to work with people who want to have a good time .
4 You want to have a good time and paint the town red this weekend , but somehow you feel restricted and constrained from enjoying life .
5 ‘ Users just want to have a good time , ’ he says .
6 Just four days after completing a 30-hour journey from Edinburgh to Darwin they were expected to overcome a nine-hour time difference and temperatures in the 90 's to beat a Northern Territories Invitation XV .
7 So we do n't really need to make a set time actually , if we 're all there we just all come and we just .
8 She seemed to wait a long time before she heard footsteps within , and then a light sprang up beyond the frosted glass .
9 What sort of crazy person would choose to have a hard time ?
10 Grandson Richard 's reply seemed to take a long time .
11 It seemed to take a long time .
12 It seemed to take a long time to reach the end of the wall and I was about to turn right towards the door of the farm kitchen when from my left I heard the sudden rattle of a chain then a roaring creature launched itself at me , bayed once , mightily , into my face and was gone .
13 Certainly those who were in the square in 1387 hoping to see the completion of the Duomo would have had to wait a long time , far longer than the span of a human life .
14 Though Louis had had plenty of time to gain experience of ruling and to form a court of his own in the subkingdom of Aquitaine ( he had been king there since the age of three ) , he had had to wait a long time for his father 's inheritance .
15 ‘ I have had to wait a long time for the freedom , but it will be passed down and at least I can say that I was a Freeman of Chester .
16 Patients sought a declaration that the Secretary of State and health authorities were in breach of duty as they had had to wait an unreasonable time , because of a decision not to build a new block for a hospital on grounds of cost .
17 Lonrho and its shareholders , whatever the merits of their case , have had to wait an unconscionable time for the facts to be established .
18 It seemed bizarre that a band plagued by such huge problems on an international scale should wish to waste their time attempting to sue a small time and , to be frank , penniless magazine .
19 It can be used to define a typical time scale of the turbulence .
20 I never say my work is going to last a long time — usually five to ten years , though obviously the smaller pieces which are kept inside last as long as people look after them .
21 The war 's going to last a long time yet . ’
22 ‘ For one who intends to stay a long time with us , Englishman , you know little of us .
23 we 're not going to play golf , we 're going to have a good time .
24 And tonight he was going to have a good time .
25 I 'm going to have a good time , she told herself firmly when she heard André 's knock on the door .
26 Whatever , Yeb walks past grabbing my arm and tells me we 're going to have a good time .
27 We 're all going to have a terrific time together , you know that , do n't you ? ’
28 Clearly , a character wearing a mask is going to have a tricky time with some Fel tests .
29 Because I was older and a bit more staid I was going to have a hard time .
30 She 's going to have a ripping time .
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