Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] time for the " in BNC.
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1 | You need time for the leaflets to be effective — maybe three weeks . |
2 | Oh , so now we have time for the exhibition ? thought Jay . |
3 | It takes time for the validity or fruitfulness of any academic development to become clear , and too rapid a response to intellectual fashions could leave institutions with an embarrassing residue of dubious courses , which once installed are difficult to dislodge . |
4 | Of course it takes time for the increased number of women on the list to work through into actual appointments , but one of the purposes behind the Prime Minister 's initiative was to see that they did work through into actual appointments . |
5 | After the service it took time for the galleries to empty . |
6 | It took time for the first cracks to appear . |
7 | The reason was no doubt that it took time for the Consumer Protection Advisory Committee to report . |
8 | It took time for the Americans to commit themselves to a battle for the stomachs , hearts and minds of the people living in the Western zones of Germany . |
9 | He declared that it provides time for the family to gather or the body to be transported home and it offers an opportunity for them to see the person in a state of peaceful repose . |
10 | Here in Canada we are badly isolated from regular contact with soccer , so when it comes time for the World Cup , the cable sports network dredges up some living bodies to do the commentary . |
11 | It is always a puzzle with Peter Kennedy , just how does he find time for the volume of work he produces . |