Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [verb] in time " in BNC.

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1 Everyone involved at this period put in time and effort far beyond what might have been predicted .
2 Leading bareboat , flotilla and club holiday company Sunsail have their all-new glossy brochures published in time for the New Year booking rush , offering some new destinations and routes .
3 Old ladies trapped in time imagine they are in 1929 and love 's first blossoms are just around the corner , an old man feels angry and cheated that 40 years of his life have disappeared .
4 Some pupils came in time to like it ; not simply because the outbursts were part of Lewis ‘ act ’ , but because he was conscientious teacher , who was concerned , as the Great Knock had been , to wage war on sloppy language and sloppy thinking .
5 Never fear , messieurs , we shall have this mystery solved in time of nothing at all .
6 Obviously completing joint statements booking in time to go on the computers to get them typed up nicely
7 Carl Puttnam 's beautiful Mick Hucknall-style russet locks bounce in time with the throbbing , sultry beat .
8 They bounced from wall to wall , crossing and recrossing , and the violet light flickered in time with the sound .
9 In a beaker at one of the duty stations cold tea rippled in time with the siren .
10 The camera makes them seem four-dimensional — solid figures moving in time .
11 The user is then free to choose the environment which best matches their use characteristics or which improves their aggregate efficiency measured in time , error or quality terms .
12 The grey ovoid pulsed in time with the words .
13 And if it does , will the task-force leaders become in time what the product managers have been at Proctor & Gamble : the basic units of management and the company 's field officers ?
14 In the Vale of Glamorgan , which the Tories won by 19 votes after a second recount , 64 overseas voters registered in time to vote .
15 With support from the local council and a recent £500,000 grant from the Foundation for Sport and the Arts , Hounslow are hoping to move in and have an artificial pitch laid in time for the start of next season .
16 Without patronage , however , political interests withered in time , for the needs of the voters would drive them to look for aid elsewhere if there did not seem a reasonable probability that their present connections might recover their lost influence in London .
17 Last Thursday night the pub presented a triple bill described in Time Out magazine , the Baedeker Guide for London pub rock fans , as ‘ melodic pop rock ’ .
18 At least they now have twelve months to recover in time for next year 's race .
19 At least they now have twelve months to recover in time for next year 's race .
20 It is always very difficult , in dealing with the relationship between past events and contemporary policies , to know how far back to go in time .
21 This may all seem a bit of an unnecessary fuss , but it 's a small price to pay in time and trouble and money in order to save the marriage and turn it into an asset rather than a liability .
22 These distinguishing devices developed in time into the system we now know as heraldry .
23 Their gutting knives flashing in time to the music .
24 It allows the study of a rapid societal development limited in time and space within very narrow boundaries .
25 When they said , for example , ‘ in the reign of the King Cheops ’ they thought of a distant event situated in time in a rather vague way .
26 But the growth in knowledge enabled by the activities of reading , meditation and contemplative prayer grows in time ; it engages with the inexhaustible wisdom of God .
27 An anonymous teacher writing in Time Out said : ‘ I decided that I had to get out of teaching when , walking down the corridor , I heard myself screaming ‘ Tie ! ’ ’ at some kid I did n't even know .
28 Within a landfill most materials decompose in time .
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