Example sentences of "have time " in BNC.

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1 Those with fluctuating dementia do have times of insight .
2 In both cases this is a real emergency , because in the event of a cable break the pilot does not have time to realise what is wrong , and he may well stall and spin if he flies by attitude and tries to turn without checking the actual speed .
3 Young people were afraid , wondering if they would have time to have their children , and became agitated at the racheting-up of international tensions in East and West .
4 I stayed home so we 'd have time this evening .
5 ‘ I do n't have time for lunch , ’ said Sara .
6 Pity I did n't have time to make bouillabaisse .
7 ‘ The last thing a Secretary of State would normally have time to do is to see if the Historic Royal Palaces are being run in a way to maximise profit . ’
8 But we 'll all be so busy reading all this wonderful stuff , and learning from the big bad world about how to market it , that we wo n't have time to do anything else . ’
9 We did n't have time to play on the beach or in the streets with the other kids .
10 The impression I have is that once the Brabham-taming begins he wo n't have time to speak to us again , never mind buy lunches .
11 But really , I think , it 's the case that , in this job , you do n't have time to develop obsessions , what with the insane turnover , and all the incentives to pluralism .
12 Tony did n't have time to waste booking him as a support act or doing a club circuit or anything like that .
13 He does n't have time for all this . ’
14 Politicians do n't have time to read screeds , so you have to give them short , pithy things to look at , We were doing all this anyway , of course , but the chaps at Barton , including Andy , are working on it much more effectively since we were able to say definitely that the DTI civil servants were agin them .
15 ‘ The good ones do n't have time for long drunken lunches , and you get better results by getting them to give you and the client a sandwich in a bar at six p.m .
16 He did n't like the sound of that much , so he changed his mind and said he might not have time , anyway , after his other reading in a church hall .
17 ‘ See , she 's an usherette now , so she do n't have time for me no more . ’
18 Must have time to think . ’
19 Some commentators get so excited about identifying the stuff with an excretion of insects living on twigs of the tamarisk , that they do not have time for much else .
20 ‘ You wo n't have time for all this stuff when we get home again , what with the oven to clean and everything , ’ he persisted .
21 This sharp differentiation , and the various impulses and societal shifts which encouraged it ( which unfortunately we do not have time to go into here ) was quite different from the situation which pertained t.n earlier Hebrew history .
22 Hard-working farmers and country people do n't always have time to appreciate the beauty in a line of animals on the move .
23 If you do not have time to prepare breakfast it should not matter .
24 What if one day you just do not have time ?
25 The question is therefore asked with an implication attached to it of ‘ do I have to start getting really worried now or do I have time to adjust to this bad news ? ’
26 I feel there are a lot more important things in life than looking good , and in countries where life is harder you do n't have time to worry about such things , you 're too busy working or preparing the next meal .
27 It needs a very large orchestra and I needed a lot of rehearsals so that I could have time to explain the piece fully to the orchestra .
28 That 's why I have a manager and people to do things for me , because some things I just do n't have time to do myself .
29 ‘ If you do n't want or do n't have time to haggle , ’ says Mr Latif , ‘ you should make sure you buy your carpet , your jewellery , or your woodwork from a fixed-price store .
30 ‘ Most of the time we were so busy rushing the posters out that we did n't have time to read them or think about what they said , ’ said Mr Mark Roblett , 27 , the elder of the two brothers whose south London company came to the aid of both parties .
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