Example sentences of "from day to " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Moneylender Cash loan usually between £30 and £1,000 from a local firm ( or broker who fixes it with a finance company ) , usually without security and for a fixed period ( anything from days to years ) ; may be paid in fixed instalments or lump sum ; interest rate fixed at start . |
2 | Then one must wait anything from days to months — ; how long depends on how much radioactivity is present — before , eventually , the film , now called an autoradiogram , can be developed ( the process is autoradiography ) . |
3 | The number density of the atomic particles in the wind varies on time scales from days to years , in response to variations in solar activity . |
4 | ‘ We are switching five instrument and five electrical technicians from days to the five shifts , ’ said Ian Mincher . |
5 | You shall this twelve month term from day to day , |
6 | The amount of force needed to lock them will vary considerably from aircraft to aircraft and even perhaps from day to day . |
7 | Furthermore , people vary in their tolerance from day to day , and it is not safe to assume that because you have been to 15,000 feet or so without oxygen before , you will be able to do it again . |
8 | And yet , alighting in the sunshine from the trembling train I found myself in a space transfigured by the three stages of the passage through the underworld that is matinee cinema : the transition from day to night ; the day for night of the viewing ; the transition back to daylight . |
9 | beneath the details of everyday life which Shamin describes is a feudal economy where small farmers scratch out a living from day to day , where one false step can mean falling into debt or mortgaging one 's land without hope of recovery and where one rebellious individual can place the entire economic unit , the joint family , at risk . |
10 | • Strengthen your daily time-cues and make them as reproducible from day to day as possible . |
11 | An important property of such a clock is its stability ; that is , its timing does not alter much from day to day . |
12 | The hallmarks of Thomas à Kempis 's approach to the religious life are a rigorous inner self-discipline and a conformity , for reasons of humility , to the existing forms of Christianity as met from day to day wherever you happen to be . |
13 | The easy course , in fact , in a life of ‘ self-sufficiency ’ is to drift from day to day , working hard but always responding to circumstances ; on a subsistence holding like ours , there is always somewhere to be weeded ; something to be mended or maintained . |
14 | Theirs is an America of hardcore unemployment of gangs , of drugs and guns and struggle to make it from day to day . |
15 | While this is true , we want you to feel in control of your weight and to be able to interpret the minor fluctuations that occur from day to day . |
16 | In practice it is difficult to accurately measure such a small drop , and weight does fluctuate a little anyway from day to day . |
17 | I am able to examine concepts , she thought , to test values , for I have thought things out , I am not like my sister who bakes and cleans and shops and irons , and goes from day to day , never realising what her mind might discover , content to accept what has always been told her , without a doubt . |
18 | Rather , they were of decisive moment in how we lived from day to day and deserved the commemoration of daily objects , so that William 's figure , seated on his prancing white charger , sword-arm raised in a gesture of advance , decorated tea-towels and plates . |
19 | It can soldier on , living from day to day in the hope that it can attract support from MPs in one or another minority party — there are likely to be at least 50 such members — for each piece of legislation . |
20 | When clubs in the lower divisions are fighting bankruptcy , living from day to day on a shoestring budget for want of funds that , to most First Division players , would be petty cash , it seems rather arrogant of Mr Taylor to be threatening strike action over sums of money and perquisites most footballers can only dream of . |
21 | From day to day , this is limited to sweeping or vacuuming , with a spot application of seal should wear ever become evident ( in the domestic situation , this can often be as long as five years from the date of installation ) . |
22 | The delay between this booking-in and being seen by the doctor varies from day to day , from hour to hour , and from clinic to clinic . |
23 | Perhaps we should think about it , instead of drifting on from day to day . |
24 | Then said he , I am Saint Lazarus , and know that I was the leper to whom thou didst so much good and so great honour for the love of God ; and because thou didst this for his sake hath God now granted thee a great gift ; for whensoever that breath which thou hast felt shall come upon thee whatever thing thou desires to do , and shalt then begin , that shalt thou accomplish to thy heart 's desire , whether it be in battle or aught else , so thy honour shall go on increasing from day to day ; and thou shalt be feared both by Moors and Christians , and thy enemies shall never prevail against thee , and thou shalt die an honourable death in thine own house , and in thy renown , for God hath blessed thee ; — therefore go thou on , and evermore persevere in doing good ; and with that he disappeared . |
25 | The frequency and extent of the roll varies from day to day and from one set of conditions to another . |
26 | His was the quiet type of a Christ-lived life , and his influence was marked for good and for a strong quality of wisdom which left its mark upon many whom he came in contact with from day to day . |
27 | C. The flow of water , or discharge , in rivers varies from summer to winter , and from day to day . |
28 | My health is improving from day to day . |
29 | People live from day to day in a world full of uncertainties . |
30 | She was somebody who had mild short-term memory loss , which varied from day to day but she could remember anything about the past . |