Example sentences of "the time [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The times allowable are given in Ord 8 , r 2(3) ( a ) and ( b ) or in the table in Vol 2 of The Supreme Court Practice , para 902 . |
2 | In the wake of the MacCabe affair in 1981 , an editorial in the Times Higher Education Supplement said that a fissiparous discipline such as English had a number of hard choices in front of it : it could become even more pluralistic and diffuse , with accompanying pedagogic problems ; it could repressively impose one favoured approach ; or it could split . |
3 | There followed an awful period of nearly a year when she was unemployed , searching the back pages of the Times Higher Education Supplement in vain every week for lectureships in nineteenth-century English Literature . |
4 | This meant the banning of The Times , The Sunday Times , the Times Educational Supplement , the Times Higher Education Supplement , the Times Literary Supplement , the Sun and the News of the World . |
5 | I presume neither Mr Baker nor Mrs Rumbold was aware that for over ten years I had been conducting a campaign to make creative writing a central feature of the English curriculum , and that in October 1983 I helped to organise a manifesto on this subject which was published in the Times Higher Education Supplement . |
6 | Some of all this specific debate surfaces in the pages of the Times Higher Education Supplement , and even on occasion in the general ‘ quality ’ press . |
7 | THE KEYNOTE ADDRESS at last year 's College and University Booksellers group annual conference given by Peter Scott , then editor of the Times Higher Education Supplement , looked ahead at Higher Education in the Year 2000 . |
8 | A leader in The Times Higher Education Supplement had this to say : |
9 | A leader in the Times Higher Education Supplement called the plan to abolish the ILEA ‘ a disgraceful measure that plainly verges on maladministration ’ , and went on to claim that the abolition ‘ will set back education in London for a generation ’ . |
10 | This was certainly the view of a leader in The Times Higher Education Supplement which talked of ‘ the expectation , and for many the hope , that the bipartite structure to be established by the Bill will not endure for long ’ . |
11 | In May The Times Higher Education Supplement , in an article entitled ’ Merging the High and Low Roads ’ , suggested that further education funding in Scotland could in future be incorporated in the proposed Scottish higher education funding council . |
12 | This Review was subject to a number of appeals for re-assessment , but the final recommendations , as described in the Times Higher Education Supplement ( Anon 1988 ) were that : Aberdeen should not support research in the earth sciences , ( although lobbying from the petroleum industry and politicians ensured the continuation of its highly successful M Sc courses in petroleum geology ) ; the Geology Department at St Andrews should merge with Geography ; and that Glasgow should incorporate the departments at Dundee , Stirling and Strathclyde . |
13 | The Times Higher Education Supplement has carried out a number of peer reviews of UK University Departments over the years . |
14 | The Times Higher Education Supplement began an editorial on the CNAA in 1972 with the statement : ‘ The Council for National Academic Awards must be one of the few unqualified success stories in higher education in the past eight years — sharing that honour perhaps with the Open University ’ . |
15 | In The Times Higher Education Supplement David Hencke reported that many college and polytechnic directors believed that universities ‘ are relaxing their validation standards to enable former colleges of education to start new arts and science degrees ’ , and quoted Edwin Kerr as being confident that colleges succeeding with CNAA validation would consider it to have been worthwhile . |
16 | The final version of the report was sent to the Polytechnic and — with Kerr assuring the Council that the responsibility could not have lain with the CNAA itself — was leaked to the Times Higher Education Supplement and appeared in its issue of 8 September , under the headline : ‘ Closure threat to poly in CNAA 's toughest-ever report ’ . |
17 | If the program has potential , it is likely that the publisher is going , bring it to the school 's notice or it will be mentioned in article computer applications in , for example , the Times Educatic Supplement . |
18 | ( The Times 11.10.90 ) |
19 | New Scientist 13 July Financial Times 5 July The Times 5 July |
20 | ( The Times 3.10.90 ) |
21 | The Times 4 October |
22 | Washington Post 6 , 12 February International Herald Tribune 13 , 24 February Guardian 10 , 13 , 15 , 20 February The Times 4 February The Scotsman 13 February Financial Times 12 , 13 , 19 February Independent 6 , 13 February Independent on Sunday 9 February New Scientist 8 , 22 , 29 February |
23 | I choose first names , which at first sight seem to be completely uninteresting , except insofar as one anxiously awaits the frequency counts published in The Times each year to see whether one 's name is still ‘ in ’ . |
24 | That small part of the Doctor 's character that allowed for scepticism reminded him of all the times such naivety had landed him in trouble before . |
25 | The Times 18 June |
26 | He 's got the times six o'clock |
27 | When Liverpool City Council abolished the title of lord mayor in 1983 there was a ‘ public outcry ’ ( The Times 18.5.83 ) , thus demonstrating once again a point made 100 years earlier in 1888 : ‘ that a sentimental grievance is by no means the least difficult to overcome ’ when considering changes in local government ( quoted in Hampton 1966:463 ) . |
28 | The Times 12.1.90 reported that public health labs have found that up to 60% of all uncooked chickens in shops are contaminated by Salmonella and Listeria . |
29 | It 's a sign of the times that pop-as-reinvention-of-the-self is something that resonates for fewer and fewer people in the world that is the music press readership . |
30 | He agreed with The Times that imprisonment at the discretion of the creditor was a really powerful engine for extracting from the debtor any property he had concealed or done away with . |