Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] that [adj] time " in BNC.

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1 I hope that next time we will have a woman in a major role .
2 Now yes this is very very welcome indeed , but I do see it Mr Chairman in the experience of the past and that really with the hard work that you both have put in as a piece of paper it is now in the computer as far as I can see and I think there is a term now within agriculture and I will give you an example of this and I think it now , it may apply I think to our road system particular particularly in the north , north Suffolk , yeah I think the term is set-aside , and I hope that some time central government will acknowledge that within this eastern region certainly the Lowestoft area and Waking area we have very great problems , because these pieces of jigsaw do not come into the full picture , they 're put in place now and then and later and in apparent it is giving us a very great problem certainly within the last
3 And I doubt that this time around Arab public opinion will separate the action of Western governments so clearly from Western peoples as they seemed able to do after Suez .
4 I cast one longing glance up at the cliffs of Coire Ardair , where the sun was glancing off the icy tips of gleaming rock , and I knew that next time I 'd get the sucker .
5 I remembered that first time we had come here .
6 I think that this time I decided meself that I was gon na come off when I got paid .
7 But something about him makes me feel that this time he will do what he has said .
8 And she revealed that first time buyers in Northern Ireland have the most affordable housing in Britain .
9 Laura Davies won the US Women 's Open in 1987 and such is the power that she generates that any time she plays really well she wins .
10 Anything that was n't like that , though , Dave would handle all the rhythms and I 'm really glad that we did that this time because it allowed us each to focus in on what we were doing — me on my solos and Dave on the rhythms .
11 Because they know that next time they 'll be out on their ears . ’
12 They did not know when accident or sickness would hit them , and though they knew that some time in middle age — perhaps in the forties for unskilled labourers , perhaps in the fifties for the more skilled — they would become incapable of doing a full measure of adult physical labour , they did not know what would happen to them between then and death .
13 They said that last time I was in , but I 'm still ‘ ere , ai n't I ? ’
14 At first he was surprised at this and only when they referred to him as an ‘ adult ’ did he realize that some time in the previous weeks the last of his juvenile plumage had moulted and his wings now had the rich and glossy glow of an adult golden eagle .
15 She looked at him and for a moment he thought that this time it was going to be easy , this time she would believe him and go to sleep .
16 He said that some time ago the POWs fund was merged with a general purposes benefit fund for all old comrades of the regiment , but that POWs were given priority in any benefit payouts .
17 ‘ That will be enough for him , because he knows that next time he will make more money , perhaps 10 , perhaps even 50 per cent .
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