Example sentences of "[adv] [noun sg] and time " in BNC.

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1 Probably only distance and time , distance and velocity .
2 There are other problems teachers have to face up to in practice ; getting to learn how to use the programs and how to fit them into their schemes , for instance : both require much thought and time .
3 More thought and time is given to questions of map design and methods of data manipulation .
4 Both tact and time are needed to effect this , and it may be that fully sighted friends are the best guides .
5 Remember that a telephone call costs your employer both money and time , and for those reasons your technique for making calls should be both planned and cost-effective .
6 The principle can be extended to fill both space and time .
7 Thus , very roughly , the cost in both space and time of parsing a sentence containing m independent n -fold syntactic ambiguities is more nearly proportional to m times n than to n m , the number of possible parses .
8 Having once formed , it emanates ‘ morphogenetic fields ’ that influence the form taken by all other crystals of the same kind : and the fields of each new individual combine to provide a ‘ morphic resonance ’ , active across both space and time .
9 He suggested that these fields are moulded by the form and behaviour of past organisms of the same species through direct connections across both space and time , a process he calls ‘ morphic resonance ’ .
10 In reality an object moves in both space and time .
11 Accordingly , in the autumn of 1870 , under the new title " Tragedy and the Freethinkers " , he drew up the first main plan whose scope , in both space and time , went substantially beyond Greece .
12 We shall see later that when one combines general relativity with the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics , it is possible for both space and time to be finite without any edges or boundaries .
13 It also differs from the " layer cake " approach in not visualising layers which are parallel in both space and time .
14 It is demonstrated by means of both cross-section and time series studies on a disaggregated level that the evolution of relative supply-side characteristics ( productivity growth , renewal of the capital stock , product composition , etc ) of the different national industries affects their respective market shares in domestic and international markets and thus their growth performance .
15 The format of the character string is : Where : The date or both date and time may be set as show below .
16 The fact that new cars are normally sold with a guarantee that includes both mileage and time is a useful illustration of the dilemma .
17 Parties of chimpanzees congregate at fruiting trees irregularly spaced in both location and time and , since the animals eat small soft-bodied fruits in dense clumps , they can feed together and then move on or separate without producing an immediate over-exploitation of resources .
18 The great Russian theoretical physicist Lev Davidovitch Landau was fond of saying about [ 4 ] " There is obviously no such limitation — I can measure the energy and look at my watch ; then I know both energy and time ! "
19 Just as many equality feminists opposed shoring up the traditional family at the beginning of the century , so present-day Labour has been challenged internally time and time again — and externally by the women 's and lesbians and gay liberation movements — on its sexual politics .
20 A chasm has undoubtedly developed , but the sporadic re-emergency of the blasted simulators — they keep crawling up time and time again with bedraggled , sanguine hollers of intent - and the beady eyes cast by all manner of unlikely contenders on pop 's centre stage ( ‘ We see no reason why this band should n't be huge ’ ) — suggests that our new proposition of an overground and underground sticks in the craw .
21 It comes up time and time again , and you have to know the difference between the different types .
22 ‘ Three names kept cropping up time and time again , ’ a police spokesman said .
23 The blueprint based on his earlier experiences ensured that the old drama was played out time and time again , thereby validating its own predictions .
24 Mr Pascall 's emphasis came back time and time again to the idea of a ‘ framework ’ : ‘ The purpose of the national curriculum , ’ he said , ‘ is to ensure that there is a framework so that we can be confident that every child has the opportunity to read widely , to develop the habit of reading and to develop the love and understanding of literature .
25 From the moment guests phone through their reservation , to the day they check out , it provides a range of services which make their stay more enjoyable and brings them back time and time again .
26 If you have ever actually looked at this document that they have produced for today 's meeting , it is not a strategy , it 's not a statement , it 's just a trotting out of the old stories that have been knocked back time and time again , but if they 're gon na bring it out , let's knock it back again .
27 Because graphs particularly distance and time graphs I mean both of these are very likely to come up , you 'll get a translation of some sort , and you 'll get a distance time graph but the the the graphs or distance against time er are useful in other problems as well .
28 We 'll debate and these instructions , but there 's always this shortfall , and it 's been going on for far too long , and we still have an increasing number of responsibilities , and I just find it extremely distressing to have to sit here time and time again , to go through doing things that we really know we should n't be .
29 Of course nothing remotely approaches the indulgent , yet time and time again Pollini characterises the music with an infinite subtlety which makes other interpretations appear almost cosmetic in comparison : listen to how gently he coaxes ( never caresses ! ) the opening phrases of and you 'll hear what I mean .
30 Everyone assumes that students know how to make and use their notes , and yet time and time again a piece of work does not receive the grade it deserves because crucial material or ideas have been left out ; often this is information which the lecturer gave out in classes but which the student did not note down .
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