Example sentences of "the rest of [art] time " in BNC.
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1 | It 's the rest of the time I 'm talking about . |
2 | They could choose when to study what and play the rest of the time if they chose . |
3 | ‘ The rest of the time , I sleep . |
4 | The rest of the time , it 's largely down to Pat to attend to all the kennel duties . |
5 | The rest of the time at sittings , Tom has been dealing with relatives who have ‘ passed over ’ , including his mother , who died in 1987 , and his father , who had five brothers . |
6 | For the rest of the time , we talked only of natural history and local gossip , and got on very well . |
7 | Long — well , perhaps not that long-ago , in a drowsy Melbourne suburb called Surrey Hills , where Christmas came but once a year and the rest of the time there was the telly , you could say life was dull . |
8 | We skied by day , and the rest of the time we explored our idea for Summit . ’ |
9 | For much of the rest of the time we slept and cooked out , though most people never actually slept in their hammocks as the trees grew inconveniently far apart . |
10 | Rivalry is hot ; each superstar spends two hours a day in the gym and the rest of the time eating to keep up their colossal weight . |
11 | But I wonder how aware you are of your breathing pattern the rest of the time . |
12 | The rest of the time the students , who were paid a salary , were deployed to teach in schools throughout the country , with the back-up of distance learning materials and periodic supervisory visits from National Centre staff . |
13 | In my own survey of visitors to the British Museum in which teams of five interviewers worked for four separate weeks interviewing at the museum entrances I made sure that I was present for at least the first day of each survey and was available by phone during the rest of the time . |
14 | For the rest of the time it is a mass of dead stems which can remain standing for up to two years , a sight distasteful to town-dwellers who , thanks to the energies of gardeners and the preference of landscape architects for evergreens , are not accustomed to seeing decay . |
15 | For the rest of the time — the quieter moments in its life — it must render itself inconspicuous . |
16 | There were no school sports and no athletics , just football , and that is what I played for the rest of the time I was there . |
17 | The rest of the time was devoted to history or geography , but always there would be two afternoons given over to handicrafts , particularly knitting and sewing . |
18 | For the rest of the time , they spoke only of business . |
19 | The rest of the time he spent with Diniz , and Katelina . |
20 | For the rest of the time they live in a group , or as individuals , depending on the species . |
21 | For the rest of the time , he and his steed must return to the churchyard where his mortal remains lie . |
22 | The rest of the time is spent with his wife , British fashion designer Ellis Flyte . |
23 | Diana was originally going to spend just Christmas Day with her in-laws and the rest of the time with sons William and Harry at Althorp House with her brother Earl Spencer . |
24 | The rest of the time he caught snapper or conch or lobster , and brooded over the souls of his ramshackle family ; each of whom was named for a different book in the Bible . |
25 | Because Revson just did a small number of American races and spent the rest of the time on the FI circuit . |
26 | For the rest of the time they were there money did not exactly overshadow them but the pressing need for it was always there , it was always in their minds . |
27 | The rest of the time was free , but of course there was still no privacy . |
28 | Whelan has played in only three North Region events and six pro-ams this year , spending the rest of the time working in his father 's restaurant and glassware gift shop to earn the £1,200 he needed to get to the School . |
29 | Half of the time this gives rise to tritium and a proton , and ( almost ) the rest of the time gives helium-3 and a neutron . |
30 | He did n't think of her as often now , except perhaps on a long weekend when he was off-duty ; the rest of the time he had things to occupy his mind . |