Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] by the time " in BNC.
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1 | While the grave concern about the prevalence of crime noted by The Times was often articulated , it was not yet politicized . |
2 | If the value of the original investment falls by the time your Cancellation Notice is received by Midland Life the lower sum will be paid to you . |
3 | At six months old , she 's already visited three mills — perhaps she will attend a formulation meeting by the time she 's two ? |
4 | ‘ The main damage was at the back , to dressing rooms , for example , and there will still be a lot of work to do by the time December arrives . ’ |
5 | I think there should be a more stringent system of entry into the drama schools so that there is a higher standard of work achieved by the time they come to join the profession . |
6 | In the same way , he might have looked at the conflicts between institutions , genres and styles during the 1890–1930 period ( for instance , between old-fashioned vaudeville and new syncopated styles ; or between the requirements of public dance and private listening ) , rather than just the more homogeneous synthesis established by the time it ended . |
7 | I want this whole this place tidied by the time I get back please ? |
8 | In the case considered the motion is transverse to OA , and so the curvature is that of the geodesic surface defined by the time direction and the spatial direction transverse to OA . |
9 | Civil War A Royal Armouries Exhibition sponsored by THE TIMES |
10 | This was the argument voiced by The Times on 8 October : ‘ The working of parliamentary institutions , of democratic responsibility , and of constitutional practice , demands it . ’ |
11 | There 's not really much choice left by the time we get to the front of the queue . ’ |
12 | Among the other problems encountered was its failure to attract the scale of advertising enjoyed by the Times . |
13 | Well he 's got to be in a position to complete by the time the notice runs out . |
14 | The user will also know how the new system operates by the time it becomes operational , with the result that there are likely to be fewer ‘ teething troubles ’ with the new system . |
15 | He had quite a cheerful blaze going by the time she came back , with an armful of twigs and berries which she arranged artistically in a vase on the table . |
16 | He had a lantern lit by the time she had dressed , wrapping herself last of all in the big , hooded cloak she had brought for Birsay . |
17 | These theories point to the fundamental importance of T 2 as a true second-order transition temperature and to the experimental T g as the temperature governed by the time scale of the measuring technique . |