Example sentences of "[adv] for a time " in BNC.

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1 Sometimes the polyphony is treated in a free manner , voices imitating each other loosely for a time and then taking a free course until imitations begin again .
2 But it would be only for a time and she had been thinking of asking the queen-dowager for permission to leave sanctuary and visit her mother .
3 A quick , sharp beverage that hits you in the throat and then in the guts ; that changes , perhaps only for a time , your way of seeing the world ?
4 ‘ It 's only for a time , ’ Fred said on the last night of the tour .
5 At a time when only the Northumbrians , and then only for a time in the reign of Eadberht ( 737–58 ) , minted coins of pure silver , southern England experienced a decline in the quality of its sceattas .
6 Surely , to get her out of that tedious place — if only for a time — must be a better answer .
7 Besides these major product innovations , the eurobond market has seen a plethora of subsidiary innovations , many of which have been one off or flourished only for a time .
8 Dorothy , left in the bigger house , alone for a time and then , later , with Alice and Jasper , seemed to have fewer friends .
9 When Jean Hay had become Jean Keith , it was only natural that she assumed head girl status , so for a time , things were a little uncomfortable .
10 He will not feel able to leave , and so for a time he will strive to manage alone .
11 Whereby the whole church family , broke up into groups for a period of education , and then came together for a time of celebration and worship .
12 She had hoped , as women do , that living together for a time would break down his coldness .
13 We may face the black night together for a time .
14 He struck out at them and soared upwards and they fell away for a time .
15 ‘ Gone away for a time . ’
16 Thus for a time after 1905 alien influence in Northeast Asia became a less immediate question .
17 ‘ All the same , ’ he said , when the spring buds burst on the seven trees that grew in Mafeking Street , along which Wendy had once half-run , half-walked , on her way to give birth to Apricot , ‘ it would be nice to be somewhere different , just for a time , just for a couple of weeks . ’
18 But ( as medieval quacks knew ) more easily for a time , with the patient bled of his humours .
19 On the other hand , order out of chaos and the rebirth of a defeated nation were admirable reasons for being attracted to Fascism , yet they were n't the real ones in her case , and even if Hitler had mesmerised her very conclusively for a time , she was older and wiser now and able to revise her view of a man who could change his principles so casually in the light of expediency .
20 And Rosalba roused her heavy , hollow limbs and submitted to the tasks , finding in the repetitiousness of domestic labours a lulling routine that could still for a time the kind of sickness she had contracted .
21 He crouched still for a time after that , for there was no haste , and now that it was time he found himself afraid ; there might be something to lose there , as well as something to find .
22 And , since the casualty list of the Westland Affair , there have been signs that the Thatcher Cabinet may function more collectively for a time at least .
23 The Falklands obliged Mrs Thatcher to behave more collectively for a time , as did the unexpectedly hostile reaction across the political spectrum to her handling of the trade-union issue at GCHQ , where policy-making by cabal truly backfired .
24 In order to defuse this rivalry , Dycarbas resolves that both sons should leave home for a time .
25 They can only be set aside for a time .
26 Mul was evidently established as king in Kent but he was burnt to death there and Caedwalla responded with a second invasion in 687 ( ASC A , s.a. 687 ) and may then have ruled Kent directly for a time .
27 Indeed , some sorts of pollution may also for a time evade detection in the laboratory .
28 In East Africa a gracile and a robust form of man–ape seem to have coincided and overlapped ecologically for a time — perhaps in a manner comparable to chimpanzees and gorillas in certain areas of their ranges today .
29 It did quite well for a time . ’
30 William Barnes , a distant Stanhope cousin , lived here for a time , but for most of its life it has been a farmhouse , which it remains .
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