Example sentences of "here [prep] [art] [adj] time " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Did another stranger come here about the same time ? ’
2 It was a leafy place ; professional people , merchants , senior civil servants had lived around here for a long time .
3 Then she said , quietly , ‘ Yes , although I have n't been here for a long time .
4 ‘ The tackle from behind has been stopped here for a long time , but they were doing it all night and getting away with it .
5 I hope to stay here for a long time . ’
6 Although I 've been here for a long time , I 've got my house , got my family here , I 've got comfortable living , although not er luxurious but er normal standard , better standard than I could have in India .
7 I mean there , there are a lot of people , of people in who have lived here for a long time , and lived here ever since they were born .
8 ‘ That woman friend of the boss who clings to his arm in the moonlight — do you think she will stay here for a long time ? ’
9 Opposition Back-Bench Members have been questioning my right hon. and hon. Friends and myself on the basis that we shall be here for a long time , whereas Front-Bench spokesmen still nurse the occasional illusion .
10 The hon. Gentleman must forgive me : I want to be fair to other hon. Members who have been here for a long time .
11 He 'd been pressing me to come down here for a long time .
12 It means so much to the supporters in the Oxford area , it means so much to the club , I think you 've really got to be up here for a long time to realise just how much it does mean to everybody in this area .
13 ‘ We are here for a good time , it is n't a crusade , but we want to win , ’ said Masters champion Couples .
14 And Couples warned : ‘ We are here for a good time , but we want to win .
15 We will help those that we have to help legally , or perhaps those whom people want to help , but we will not have foisted upon us those who come here for a good time and a good life .
16 ‘ Because I 'm working here for a short time .
17 These efforts have proved — regrettably — to be unsuccessful , and the essay is therefore printed here for the first time without its owner 's permission .
18 Here for the first time he found something of what the pilgrim on his bicycle had sought : ‘ the sense of mystery , and awe , and of another world at once far and near … a sense that we were vividly in the presence of the passion of Jesus and also vividly near to heaven , to which the passion mysteriously belonged , so as to be brought from the past to the present ’ .
19 At about this time , the BBC offered him a World Service job based in London and , at the age of 30 , he came here for the first time .
20 ‘ I became really sick here for the first time and did n't know what was going on , ’ he recalls .
21 Now here for the first time she was fighting her own battle .
22 Here for the first time the actual shape of the Council was outlined .
23 New national research , revealed here for the first time , shows that less than one in five local authorities across the UK have internal guidelines for social workers on dealing with elder abuse .
24 But there are twelve fewer non-North American galleries this year , and forty-two dealers nearly twenty-five per cent of the fair are here for the first time .
25 As Reinhard Drifte has observed , ‘ Here for the first time , the idea of a Japan-US security treaty emerges along lines of the actual treaty of 1951 . ’
26 Then he went on — ‘ Here for the first time I talked about our country with a white Rhodesian .
27 Here for the first time a Celtic writer proclaimed the superiority of British early breakfast over Latin siesta .
28 Timmy , 34 , and his Australian wife Lynda proudly show off five -week-old William Theodore Mallett here for the first time .
29 ‘ It is interesting when I bring someone like Rodney Marsh here for the first time to see his reaction .
30 The additional list of tempos by Czerny for Mozart quartets and quintets in table 1 , which appears here for the first time , also shows a similarly wide range of minuet tempos , from slow to fast ( for quartets and quintets , dotted minim = 44–84 ; together with the list of tempos by Czerny and Hummel for the Mozart symphonies , dotted minim = 42–88 see table 2 of my 1988 Early music article ) .
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