Example sentences of "[adv] from the time " in BNC.
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1 | The system was not obnoxious to the perpetuity rule , because each settlement and resettlement was designed to comply with the rule , and the perpetuity period began afresh from the time of each resettlement . |
2 | But it suited the generations of North Sea fishermen who had used it — perhaps from the time of their Viking ancestors . |
3 | The seething had been going on more or less from the time Taylor took over as manager . |
4 | It does grow less from the time her grown-up children leave the home and this crisis , which often happens quite early in life , often disturbs her very badly ; but still she does not see herself thrown into total idleness and her role of grandmother brings her fresh possibilities . |
5 | Well the o , well more or less from the time we got in she 's not gon na go back to that place |
6 | She found black paint in one of the kitchen cupboards , left over from the time Tom had painted the front door , and a brush . |
7 | dissenting ) [ 1991 ] 3 W.L.R. 790 allowing an appeal by the respondent , the Woolwich Equitable Building Society ( now the Woolwich Building Society ) , from the decision of Nolan J. [ 1989 ] 1 W.L.R. 137 that the right to repayment to them by the revenue of sums of £42,426,421 , £2,856,821 and £11,714,969 paid by Woolwich pursuant to a demand by the revenue under the Income Tax ( Building Societies ) Regulations 1986 , which were subsequently held to have been ultra vires , arose only at the moment of the decision as to the invalidity of the Regulations and not from the time that the payments were made . |
8 | For example in a database containing the full text of literary works , each work will be protected in its own right and the duration of protection for that work will be based on the life of the author plus fifty years , or in the case of an Act of Parliament ( subject to Crown Copyright ) 125 years from the end of the calendar year during which it was created , and not from the time it was entered into the database . |
9 | Settlement can be a drawn out affair and can take as long as six months or more from the time your debt became overdue . |
10 | Porter had been raised in a children 's home from the time he was two years old . |
11 | And it 'll automatically from the time I tell them . |
12 | But if you look at science as a way of exploring their world , a world they can structure their curiosity about aspects of the physical world , about aspects of the environment , then I think we can do it very early indeed , probably from the time children can come to school at the age of five and from reception classes onwards . |
13 | But if you look at science as a way of exploring their world , a world they can structure their curiosity about aspects of the physical world , about aspects of the environment , then I think we can do it very early indeed , probably from the time children can come to school at the age of five and from reception classes onwards . |
14 | The objects offered in the present sale have been culled from ‘ [ secret ] warehouses dating back to the start of the Revolution in 1949 and also from the time of the Cultural Revolution ’ . |
15 | The population is also regulated by periodic suspension of sexual relationships for 3–6 months after the taking of a head and also from the time of birth of a child until he is weaned , i.e. 2–3 years . |
16 | Right from the time when you were only a kid ! ’ |
17 | Out of the original hundred houses this was the last one to be occupied and we saw this being built , erm right from the time that it was a plot of land and we knew it was ours |
18 | ‘ You bring them on from the time they 're little , and they think they 've got it made , then — wallop . ’ |
19 | The distance from the Earth to the spacecraft can be determined very accurately from the time interval between sending a radio signal to the spacecraft , which it receives and immediately acknowledges by sending a signal to the Earth with its own radio , and the receipt on the Earth of the acknowledgement . |
20 | It stems right back from the time of Adam and Eve . |
21 | It 's true that that is a common feature really from the time of for the last five hundred million years , from the time of the earliest fish to ourselves and to the birds and everybody else , but it 's like that not because there is some kind of profound law of form , which says that 's the kind of organism which is in permitted by the laws of development to arise , erm I mean the law form would be something like erm a law of physics which says that if objects move round the sun they 're going to do so in ellipses with the sun at one focus . |
22 | Even from the time Rousseau was writing [ the 17505 ] the baton went out of use in Parisian concerts … |
23 | Piecing things together , he must have lived with them about from the time he was six to about age twelve . |
24 | If you had observed my father who arrived in this house a week after you did , you will have seen that his house knowledge is perfect and was so almost from the time he set foot in Darlington Hall . ’ |
25 | Its unique design was never put to the test in defending against attack ; instead it was used as a prison almost from the time it was built . |
26 | You will be there from the time it opens in the morning , until the evening , when our coach will be waiting to drive you back to your hotel . |
27 | You will be there from the time it opens in the morning , until the evening , when your coach will be waiting to drive you back to your hotel . |
28 | You will be there from the time it opens in the morning until the evening , when your coach will be waiting to drive you back to your hotel . |
29 | The carrier is liable for the total of partial loss of the goods and for damage thereto from the time of taking over the goods and the time of delivery . |
30 | Early medieval monasticism was largely based on the Rule of St Benedict , at least from the time of St Boniface onwards , but with the liturgical side of the Rule greatly elaborated . |