Example sentences of "[prep] [num] [noun] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 Basically , The function is the same as for the Language Master — a recording can be made of written language which is displayed for the pupil — but the Audio Page runs for 4 minutes where the Language Master only provides at most about 10 seconds of time .
2 The only sad note for the newly promoted club was the injury to their 17-year-old full-back David Mycoe , who was carried off 10 minutes from time with a suspected broken leg .
3 Members of the Royal British Legion and Sefton Borough Council officers worked together to replace the plaque and the names of 120 men in time for Remembrance Sunday .
4 The simultaneous sighting of two periods of time separated by an entire 24 hours seemed a paradox well worth experiencing .
5 LIFESPAN permits the definition of two periods of time associated with the verification cycle of the offline system :
6 United , second from bottom of the First Division , looked doomed to defeat when they fell behind 14 minutes from time , but Lee Clark rescued a point with a 25-yard special in the 88th minute .
7 They led by 14 points at the break only to dry up three minutes from time when they were 58–42 ahead leaving Paul Carr to hit the last ten points of the game and be top scorer on 28 points .
8 As the number of transactions per time period falls the understatement increases ; for example , for ten transactions per time period the understatement is about 49% .
9 Werder Bremen , the only German club left in European competition this season , beat Turkey 's Galatasaray 2–1 after being 1–0 down until 12 minutes from time .
10 Saints again struggled to get going in the second half and had to wait until three minutes from time for their final try through Hunte after numerous handling mistakes .
11 Old Loughtonians , who beat Colchester 6–1 in last year 's final , had most of the possession but could not be sure of the win until ten minutes from time .
12 Daley 's return prevented a further score until five minutes from time , when Widnes went the length of the pitch when Barry Dowd broke to give Darren Wright a try .
13 A draw seemed the most likely result until five minutes from time when Caci 's goal-bound shot was parried into the path of Hackney who lobbed home from close range .
14 A 1-1 draw looked on the cards ; looked a good bet for Oxford , until 13 minutes from time , Luton 's top scorer , Phil Gray struck a deadly blow .
15 In other words , even without changes in the basic data of the market ( that is , in consumer tastes , technological possibilities and resource availabilities ) , the decisions made in one period of time generate systematic alterations in the corresponding decisions for the succeeding period .
16 To signifies this relation of subsequence in virtue of its potential meaning of a movement from one point in time to another and has been seen to give rise to two clearly identifiable actual meanings according to whether the speaker conceives the whole movement which to is capable of signifying or only the initial part thereof .
17 None of these difficulties are likely to trouble us much in daily life , but they remain genuine difficulties none the less and raise issues of fundamental importance ; for if there can be no absolutely reliable and unequivocal criteria for deciding whether any given existent remains numerically , and not merely qualitatively , the same from one moment in time to the next , then we can not hope to be able to " define " the distinction between numerical and qualitative identity in terms of the criteria of particular-identification .
18 Yet a close analysis of the problems seemed to indicate that there could be no foolproof criteria whereby one might decide with certainty whether anything stays numerically identical from one moment in time to the next .
19 It remained 10–0 until 15 minutes from time , when Gibson picked up from a scrum and launched a blind side move which put skipper Steve Towns over .
20 Eventually , he was forced to hobble off nine minutes from time though he reported that he should be fit for England 's looming World Cup campaign .
21 Yeah , but they 're out of are n't they cos they 're saying out from eight to eight sort of time , or sixteen a week are n't they , because of the competition with them all .
22 The new space will enable the three departments to exhibit on a three- to four-month rotating basis , showing up to seventy-five works per time .
23 The centre will look after internationalisation of Sun software for the European market and will be staffed by up to 100 employees over time .
24 The centre will look after internationalisation of software for the European market , though not manufacturing , and will be staffed by up to 100 employees over time .
25 Assume that the 100 machines have been acquired at the rate of ten per time period for the last ten periods , so that from now on depreciation is equal to ten machines per time period .
26 The information recorded on the birth certificate refers to one point in time — when the child 's birth was registered — whereas the information reported at interview refers to a period of employment of three months or longer , at any time from three years before the child 's birth up until diagnosis .
27 In all cases , then , whether the infinitive evokes the possible or the real actualization of its event , the person of the to infinitive is referred to two positions in time , one before , one coinciding with this event 's place in time .
28 Liverpool finally exited in bad-tempered disarray , with Mike Marsh sent off two minutes from time for a dangerous high tackle on Dimitri Radchenko , scorer of Moscow 's first goal .
29 I will examine this problem by focusing on my own research at three points in time , the 1950s the 1970s and the 1980s .
30 Gore ( 1978 ) studied the impact of unemployment at five points in time leading up to and following the shutdown of two companies .
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