Example sentences of "[vb infin] [prep] [pron] [adj] time " in BNC.
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1 | Now then what can we do for you this time ? |
2 | With all this er trauma , did you have er Wh what did you do with your leisure time , what did you do with your free time out side of the outside the pit ? |
3 | This directive encourages officers to research and study in their own time and lists suitable subjects , which include ‘ public administration , management studies , economics , law , criminology , social sciences , youth work , English language and literature and relevant modern languages ’ . |
4 | What do I do in my spare time ? |
5 | I do n't have to ask you what I should do in my spare time , and — and I suppose now you wo n't want to help me find my mother , and that 's all right with me , I do n't care ! ’ |
6 | What do you do in your spare time ? |
7 | ‘ And what do you do in your spare time ? ’ |
8 | So erm what do you do in your spare time ? |
9 | With so much to see and do in your short time in Amsterdam why not book your excursions before you travel ? |
10 | If you were away last week can you please leave space to catch up with the writing which you will do in your own time . |
11 | ‘ She would n't speak to me last time I was in your home , ’ she complained . |
12 | He reckons there are no shortages of possible uses — farmers can use it to do their accounts , women with child-care responsibilities can work in their own time on the word processors , publicity material for local craftsmen can be produced and so on . |
13 | What other libraries , museums and centres may help me ? reminding us that the maturer student will wish to venture further and work in his own time . |
14 | The British murmur ‘ You must come and stay with us some time , ’ and when they part they say ‘ Let's keep in touch ’ and they certainly do n't mean it , but it greases the wheels of intercourse . |
15 | I pray that God will really meet with him this time in prison . |
16 | And her husband is not worried ; he says she will return in her own time . ’ |
17 | We did n't hear about you first time round . ’ |
18 | It 's surprising what they 'll pay for it this time of year . ’ |
19 | The real reason for the compulsory exercise , some students believed , was to further intrude into their free time in an already highly regimented day . |
20 | just as the ermine changes it coat for winter ; just as the seed can lie dormant for thousands of years ; just as the bacteria and the rotifers can live in their desiccated time capsules for perhaps longer than we can ever envisage , awaiting a change of outer circumstances for the tiny living specks of dust to take on another form — just so , perhaps , may the living forms we know so well have secrets tucked away within them that only the rolling of the aeons can reveal . |
21 | I can not find the page now through all that excitement here when I get to it I 'll get to it some time page twenty five I 'll be alright . |
22 | You could write on it any time but then you 're just sitting in all day . |
23 | " Could n't we talk about it another time ? " |
24 | ‘ Well , ’ says Howard pointedly , looking at his watch , ‘ we must talk about it some time . ’ |
25 | Perhaps I 'll start with it next time . |
26 | She said : ‘ You will talk to him next time he telephones , wo n't you ? ’ |
27 | But I 'll talk to you some time about the heating because I mean the trouble is that no |
28 | Yes … you must come and train with us some time ! ’ |
29 | Whatever he might fling at her this time , she would not sit bowed and tongue-tied . |