Example sentences of "[conj] from time to time the " in BNC.

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1 Yet these matters , it has been suggested , lie deep — indeed , unutterably deep — in every American psyche ; and it is good that from time to time the unutterable be uttered — it is , one might say , one of the things that we look to poets for .
2 And I suspect also that from time to time the director feels that he has to placate the more hard-nosed and less imaginative of his many paymasters by producing something that could be regarded as promoting trade .
3 Against this background it is not surprising that from time to time the relationship is productive of misunderstandings , mistrust and conflict .
4 The idea came from old Mrs Ferrar , who proposed that from time to time the family should confer on some subject which should ‘ tend either to the information or to the excitement of the affections ’ .
5 Of course , I am delighted that from time to time the Garda find some of it .
6 And from time to time the moon dulled even further as thin wracks of cloud and then denser masses passed across its face .
7 Between 1981 and 1985 , more stringent controls were placed upon local government finance , and from time to time the government renewed its efforts to interest the private sector in the inner cities .
8 You can join by contacting the Law Society in London , and from time to time the Law Society arranges national media campaigns and an annual insertion in the local Yellow Pages to which you can subscribe .
9 Paige could hear him talking to the pilot , and from time to time the sound of their combined laughter .
10 There was a vigorous black-market , and from time to time the authorities had to cajole citizens to cease hoarding gold .
11 Though from time to time the editorial columns of both Uhuru and the Nationalist called for the Government to take the paper over , and a few MPs supported them , the Standard was not nationalized until February 1970 .
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