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

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1 Satellite surveillance is all very well , but it takes time to get information back and in that time a naval force can have moved a fair distance .
2 In that time a Children 's Panel Hearing must be convened , and the options assessed by Panel Members after considering all the information available .
3 And in that time a whole regiment of cavalry could have got away .
4 The North 's share of the world 's energy consumption was expected to decrease from around 70 per cent to 60 per cent by 2020 , but in that time the proportion of the global population living in the South would have grown from 75 per cent to 80 per cent .
5 In that time the story was written , typeset , and put into a redesigned page under a new headline .
6 The whole sequence of events lasted only eight seconds , and yet in that time the cuckoo had also managed to lay its own egg .
7 In that time the ulema of the three cities gave fetvas on an equal basis .
8 In that time the Great Criminal sent us not even one reply to our requests for help .
9 In that time the military have killed 100,000 civilians and 40,000 people have been ‘ disappeared ’ by death squads .
10 And in that time the number of share-owners has more than tripled to more than nine million .
11 Tommy Chase Quartet Arts Centre , Darlington IT 'S BEEN three years since the Tommy Chase Quartet last played in Darlington and in that time the other players have changed completely .
12 In that time the brain develops 50 per cent . ’
13 Er this the issues contained in the report er contined to be er , er considered by the waste management policy panel which is meeting now on er , erm a regular basis and will in due time no doubt report to the environment committee on some of it 's deliberations .
14 In due time the Latin Church decreed that Easter should be ‘ celebrated on the Sunday following the first full moon on or after 21 March ’ , and although this simplified matters slightly Easter Day might still fall on any one of thirty-five days , starting with 22 March and ending with 25 April , and the whole of the calendar was controlled by this wide spectrum .
15 Done in the Jamesian manner , Jim would doubtless find himself credited with psychological subtleties and complexities of which he is quite unaware ; but still one might hope that the writer would succeed in suggesting the highly distinctive flavour of his talk , his inimitable way of retailing a diverting anecdote leisurely and with a modicum of circumlocution , from which in due time the point of the story is sure to emerge .
16 The perception of urban problems changed ; in due time the nature of planning response changed with it , and it is in this context that explanations may be sought as to how and why the tempo and style of the public regulation of the urban environment changed so markedly at this time .
17 But in due time the contribution to population redistribution was significant enough , particularly dispersal from London , with a total of 55,000 dwellings built in no less than 32 towns including Basingstoke .
18 I think that in due time the British people will want to know a bit more than that .
19 That afternoon in free time the sergeant stopped her , and told her the work had n't been done properly .
20 British executives spend more than three years of their working lives travelling and waste £7.5bn a year in lost time every year — equivalent to a 4p cut in income tax .
21 Also basing his work on media language , written as well as spoken , Bell ( 1985 ) studies in real time the spread of a process of determiner deletion in noun phrases which has become common in news reports , as demonstrated in 35 as opposed to 36 :
22 If these anomalies are detected in good time the parents can receive counselling and the subsequent management of the pregnancy can be planned , so reducing the national perinatal mortality rate .
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