Example sentences of "be [vb pp] in time [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Within a medieval siege tent you are transported in time to the castle keep ; the lights dim and the 1066 Story begins … projected images , lighting , multi-track sound and even an appearance by King Harold and William the Conqueror !
2 They can be reliably dug out again only by averaging over many presentations so that the random background fluctuations cancel each other out , leaving just the potential shifts that are linked in time to the triggering event .
3 However , the rest of the work will not be completed in time for the season , which will make life running a heavily-booked programme of events difficult .
4 John Hart , Assistant Director ( Curriculum ) comments : ‘ Aspects of two major areas of review will be completed in time for the next Catalogue .
5 There is some doubt as to whether the processes of investigation and legislation will be completed in time for the 1995 revaluation .
6 A year-long project to update the library at Darlington College of Technology should be completed in time for the new school year in September .
7 His Opel Manta had been heavily damaged during the Burmah Rally and could n't be repaired in time for the Mourne Stages .
8 Perhaps the decision to accept covered pitches in the Championship in 1981 will be seen in time as the inevitable pre-cursor to the preference now for four-day games .
9 That necessary ditching , in all likelihood , will now be done in time for the next election .
10 Orders placed during August are unlikely to be supplied in time for the start of the Session on .
11 A programme will be produced in time for the summer season and Welcome will continue to keep Friends informed .
12 In addition an element of proportional representation would be introduced in time for the 1993 elections , as already proposed at a Socialist Party convention on Oct. 12-13 with the formation of electoral alliances with minority parties in mind .
13 Now we can only hope that things are resolved quickly enough for the developments to be finished in time for the 1994 Open . ’
14 Payment cheques , must arrive at banks by 1 April to be cleared in time for the 6 April deadline .
15 Office skills — the ability to draft letters , to write reports , and in general to manage the bureaucratic demands — can be acquired in time from the area supervisor .
16 The Class 321 units ( of which the first was delivered in September 1988 ) , were an immediate success , but the same can not be said of the Class 442 ‘ Wessex Electrics ’ of which twenty-four five-car units should have been delivered in time for the May 1988 timetable .
17 Translations in ‘ latin ’ languages like Spanish and Italian were completed in time for the promulgation of the test by the Holy Father on December 7th last year .
18 The 1962 Bedford singledecker is being resprayed in time for the rally .
19 We can now not only see why in such sentences one feels an implicit predication with respect to a support but also get a clearer view of why to is used before the infinitive : its role here seems to be simply that of indicating that the infinitive 's support is situated in time before the actualization of the infinitive 's event .
20 She will sail gently round the course in today 's race to score what points she can , while a replacement spar is completed in time for the climax of the series , the 630-mile Sydney to Hobart race which starts on Boxing Day .
21 He served notice of his intention to table a radical report on how the EC is run in time for the meeting of the 12 leaders at the Lisbon summit in June .
22 This will was completed in time for the sale period which began on Boxing Day .
23 Expansion continued , with the famous Victoria Hotel added in 1862 but it was the intention of the MS & L to reach London with its own line and in 1897 the name Great Central was adopted in time for the opening of the main line to Marylebone in April 1899 .
24 On this particular occasion it was doubled in time by the long army convoys crawling up the hills out of Lydney and Chepstow as the machine for war was ponderously assembled .
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