Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] time " in BNC.

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1 How long it takes to reach the size , and the actual attainable size of this fish are things we will only find out with time .
2 ‘ But as soon as we got to the line I realised he was going to keel over with me and I just hopped off in time .
3 He was , was he just moved on from time to time , or were they voluntary moves ?
4 I just pop up from time to time to see if Bob 's all right . ’
5 Other Companies of the Battalion were already moving off in time to take their appropriate places in the March Table .
6 Sandra had just arrived back in time to hear Mrs Foster 's grim assessment of the situation .
7 It 's it 's like it 's like going back in time the feeling about it .
8 ( only 3 quid in a cab to the ground , leave at twenty to three and still get in with time to spare ) 3 bars not four deep at the bar do n't have to wait to be served and VERY good food .
9 Are you always running out of time ?
10 Peace with France came and food prices fell , but mob rule in Cornwall could still take over from time to time .
11 There are many other more common causes of aortic incompetence , including rheumatic fever , but cases of syphilitic aortic-valve disease still turn up from time to time in this country , albeit rarely .
12 Eight years ago the plant had 27 production controllers and nothing ever went out on time .
13 Like the couple who left one of the rides early to get back in time to prepare the evening event ; and two hours later we met them — riding in the opposite direction !
14 Doreen Wranklin could n't understand it as she had always paid up on time .
15 Commercial users of grain such as brewers of beer or vinegar or producers of starch were also picked out from time to time .
16 And when you look far into space , you 're also looking back in time and we 're looking back when we look at the very most distant objects .
17 The Queen , Queen Mother and Princes William , 10 , and Harry , eight , also turned up in time for lunch in the royal shooting lodge .
18 We have also reached back in time , using memories of grandparents from more than 600 interviews and autobiographies , to try to sense how later life may have changed over two or more centuries .
19 Some people only have to take the faintest whiff of the entrance hall of a hospital to be sharply transported back in time to relive a traumatic hospital experience ( endured during childhood perhaps ) ; they may feel shaky or even nauseous .
20 Reese ( Michael Biehn ) , a human guerrilla , is simultaneously sent back in time by Connor to protect Sarah and , unwittingly , to ensure Connor 's own conception .
21 I felt , by doing that , I had effectively stepped back in time and discovered the one thing that should have been thought of before we even harnessed electricity .
22 But I think the main thing that they all had to bear to survive , was a tremendous amount of overcrowding. erm Now , we 're fast running out of time , are n't we .
23 You may well run out of time — or steam !
24 ‘ We 've simply run out of time in trying to reach an agreement with all concerned ’ said tournament director , Alex Meyer-Wolden , who nevertheless remains hopeful that he will be able to stage a mixed event in 1992 .
25 The light was changing very rapidly and I simply ran out of time .
26 There were giggles from the trees behind her , and she turned sharply , furious with her maids , then turned back in time to see Li Yuan summon the small boy forward .
27 In other words , much of the story weaves in and out , sometimes travelling back in time , sometimes forwards , in order to achieve a practical overview of the struggles and triumphs of Charlemagne .
28 Already the Five Nations have almost run out of time .
29 By the time the complex details of the preventative works had been finally drawn up and agreed we were again running out of time .
30 The Swifts then came to life with Beattie 's 25-yard free kick just over and Robinson 's forward burst barely cut out on time .
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