Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] any time [prep] " in BNC.

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1 For all her encouragement to them to come at any time to her house , Rose herself was wary of calling at Great Meadow .
2 Florence and Rome are stunning to visit at any time of the year — but in the winter they have a charm of their own .
3 These are marvellous opportunities to invite all sorts of people — friends , neighbours , relatives — to visit at any time between , say , eleven o'clock in the morning and ten o'clock at night .
4 Asked if he had been tempted to quit at any time during the past eight days , he raised a smile and a quip : ‘ I 've felt like that for the last two years !
5 The one thing he always refused to consider at any time of financial uncertainty was selling any of his personal shareholding in Virgin .
6 Regrettably but perhaps inevitably , the ambivalence of feeling and thought which is bound to exist at any time of change has been seized upon by those who can profit from it .
7 It is also helpful to be able to refer at any time to a ‘ map ’ of the pathways followed and nodes visited in the course of a particular trip through ‘ hyperspace ’ .
8 Her auntie was in , but I was to go at any time for the telephone …
9 The extent and depth of religious belief is notoriously difficult to estimate at any time in any country , but a few general statistics can be applied reliably to the peasantry of 1922 in areas like Belorussia , Kursk , and Tambov .
10 In accordance with the terms of the contract , you can choose to retire at any time after the age of 60 , when the policy will buy you a regular pension plus the option of taking part of the money as a tax-tree lump sum .
11 Whatever your kind of break , the abundance of things to see and do makes Brighton & Hove the right place to head for any time of year .
12 You can apply to enter at any time from your sixteenth birthday .
13 Pearlin and his colleagues have discussed the effectiveness of commonly used coping responses to various chronic role strains of the sort likely to erupt at any time into major events ( Pearlin and Schooler , 1978 ; Pearlin et al. , 1981 ) .
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