Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] time [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Circumstances in which overtime may be used should be identified , together with a list of staff who have agreed to be approached in time of need . |
2 | At first their mother 's sister had come from time to time but she and Moran had quarrelled . |
3 | Although the commitment to religion was stressed from time to time , often in response to the charge of militarism , the CLB always seemed to emphasize matters of social discipline and conformity . |
4 | Some members like to come back to Bristol for social events like the Alumni Foundation concerts or the sports reunions which are organised from time to time . |
5 | As to the first question it is clear that views as to the availability and scope of certiorari together with its actual use have varied from time to time . |
6 | ( 2 ) For the purposes of this section : ( a ) " special road " and " special road authority " have the same meanings as in the Roads ( Scotland ) Act 1984 and ( b ) " class I " means class 1 in Schedule 3 to the Act , as varied from time to time by any order under section 8 of that Act , but , if that Schedule is amended by such an order so as to add to it a further class of traffic , the order may adapt the reference in this section to traffic of class 1 so as to take account of the additional class . |
7 | In addition , it is supplemented from time to time by statements of practice or policy issued by the Panel . |
8 | A journal publishing the new material which had been added from time to time to the machine-readable text . |
9 | The spirit had been caught from time to time long before and by the same crossing of Italian sweetness with Netherland technique , for instance in Josquin 's ‘ Pange lingua ’ Mass ( see pp. 1767 ) , but in Palestrina and Victoria it is all-pervading , incantatory , the ideal music of mystical faith , totally purged of human emotion ( except occasionally in their motets ) and of human vanity — except the vanity of performers who ( we learn with a shock from Giovanni Bassano 's Motetti , Madrigali el Canzoni Francese di diversi eccellentissimi Auttori … |
10 | The professor will be a member ex officio of the committee , and will be expected from time to time to hold offices such as that of Chairman of the Committee or Director of Graduate Studies , and in due course to assume the duties of professor in charge of the Institute , which are customarily rotated by arrangement . |
11 | Vagrant birds of South American origin are reported from time to time on the South Orkney and South Shetland Islands ; their presence indicates repeated possibilities for colonization , but they invariably disappear quickly . |
12 | Nicholas , who is living with his family in a tiny flat , hopes the damage will be repaired in time for Christmas . |
13 | The scheme may well now be complete , but revision is recommended from time to time and thought must be given as to how this might be achieved . |
14 | The doctrine of precedent restrains tribunals and the trial judges in the county courts and in the High Court from digressing into frolics of legal innovation , but even the trial judge will be presented from time to time with issues upon which there are no binding precedents . |
15 | You will probably be visited from time to time , and in some areas you will get practical help such as toy kits , toy libraries , first aid kits and safety equipment on loan . |
16 | Moreover , whatever your age , circumstances and financial resources , taking stock is something which must be done from time to time — it is the first step in making decisions . |
17 | The three departments , however , do use official statistics in the detailed studies which are done from time to time on a one-off basis . |
18 | I am convinced that zander often shoal up or gather in great numbers when they are not hunting and to come across one of these occurrences as I have done from time to time is an unbelievably exciting experience . |
19 | There is nothing to stop the parties agreeing , after a dispute has arisen , to refer their dispute to an expert for his determination , and this is done from time to time , in the same way as arbitration agreements . |
20 | The one I have chosen is this — brief , informal letters , written from time to time as our work proceeds , in a plain , straightforward style , as it might be to a friend . |
21 | The parents separated from time to time and the father also served a prison sentence . |
22 | Heavy reclamation walls were built from time to time as the docks were extended seawards and today , the dock estate lies entirely on land reclaimed from the foreshore . |
23 | Your new patio will be designed and built in time for spring when you can really enjoy it to the full . |
24 | We have probably often been guilty of viewing censorship as something that must be imposed from time to time . |
25 | During 1740 the First Lord of the Admiralty , with Walpole 's support , tried to carry a bill to create a national register of sea-faring men from which suitable recruits could be sought in time of crisis , but it was denounced by the Opposition as being akin to slavery and thrown out . |
26 | As the author of this publication , my opinion has been sought from time to time by dealers , other scholars and the auction rooms . |
27 | The puddings are unpacked in the morning , driven over to the hospital kitchens for steaming and collected in time for dinner . |
28 | He began by securing from Parliament a fifteenth and tenth , combined with a subsidy , the first to be levied in time of peace . |
29 | Institutions authorised by the Bank of England to carry on a deposit-taking business in this country are required to make contributions to the Deposit Protection Fund as levied from time to time by the Deposit Protection Board . |
30 | A number of reconstructions were made from time to time , especially under Julius Caesar and Augustus . |