Example sentences of "[be] [adj] [noun sg] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 We are misled time after time after time when people have problems like they 're having their vehicle serviced , it 's put a claim in for a water pump , and have the cost of their service paid for .
2 The research team , based at the Bristol Oncology Centre , hopes the method will eventually become an accepted screening method as it can be used time after time without any risk to the patient 's health .
3 In the short story there does n't seem to be that kind of time — for the characters to digest and integrate the surprise into their lives .
4 In peace-time the selection ratio , the ratio of applicants to available jobs is a key feature , there tends to be more testing in times of economic depression when jobs are scarce and also in post-war periods when there is extensive experience of using tests .
5 ’ I 'm expected home on time these days .
6 And a secondment could be any length of time from a day to a week or more .
7 In the most general sense , the shelf-life of a product is that period of time between its date of manufacture and the date on which it becomes no longer acceptable for whatever reason .
8 The shelf-life is that period of time during which a product stored under market conditions changes from the limit of the release specifications to the limit of the check specification in respect of its least stable parameter .
9 The shelf-life is that period of time during which the value of the least stable parameter changes from the limiting value of the release specification to the limiting value of the check specification .
10 it 's that sort of time of the year when you have all sorts of people there , but I mean she 's such , so pathetic , words gon na come over for lunch , I mean we have them over every year sort of Christmas time
11 Alright , so what 's coming now is this idea of time is very important in agricultural supply response .
12 It is this manipulation of time and viewpoint which enables us to choose an appropriate frame through which to explore our dramatic situations .
13 Britain 's armed forces were not fully committed to the struggle until after D Day , and it is this gap in time between the turn of fortune and the invasion of Europe that saw the most intense interest in post-war planning and , in particular , full employment policy .
14 Included in this unit is another period of time spent in the School Library expanding their research techniques .
15 Below we write down A 's objective function at time s substituting the above expression for B 's actions and solving for the state variable by repeated substitution .
16 They do this by acting on the experience mode of establishing truth , and , given the uncertainty associated with any economic analysis relating to a company 's future , experience of a crisis is probably far better at getting us to reassess our schemas and scripts than is rational analysis in times of stability and success .
17 It is the doing of one or more acts which individually or collectively amount to such adverse interference with or usurpation of the owner 's rights which constitute appropriation under section 3(1) and I do not think it matters where there is more than one such act in which order the successive acts take place , or whether there is any interval of time between them .
18 From 1977 to 1980 he was commercial director at Times Newspapers , becoming general manager of the Sunday Times .
19 Using that as a working theory , I 'd say there was some sort of time limit involved — I mean , a time during which it is imperative for people not to know that he 's dead , but a time that comes to an end , after which it does n't matter so much . "
20 Duke Hussey was chief executive of Times Newspapers and living locally when he became one of our " students " .
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