Example sentences of "[verb] [indef pn] at [art] time " in BNC.

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1 The VPP500 system features a series of 1.6 GigaFLOPS vector processors , in parallel configurations of from seven to 222 , offering performances of 11.2 to 355 GFLOPS — the nodes can be added one at a time .
2 If anaphors were to be resolved one at a time and left to right , nothing would yet have been done about ‘ him ’ , so the configurational contribution would be missed and reasoning would be inevitable .
3 You 're eliminating one at a time .
4 This suggested they had been attacked one at a time , and taken by surprise , which reinforced the verdict that two and not four men were involved .
5 If , unusually , there is no time pressure , the targets can be approached one at a time in order of their relative attractiveness .
6 Moral — only ever remove one at a time so that you can see which way that have to be returned .
7 At first the books came one at a time .
8 Well Mrs Toad is having a sale in her shop + + she has laid out her caish + cash register + + an' a number of pots of tea + + it 's gon na be a special sale because + + so she has th' + a sign up saying + prices are slashed + so she hopes lots of customers will be coming along + to visit her + + while she ‘ s waiting for customers + she goes about setting out the rest of + of the shop + + for things in the sale + + an ’ she brings on + large cans of tin + of tea + + for + she can only carry one at a time + so she walks on with one and puts it on the counter + +
9 Erm but we 'll do the questions together as a class and I would like you to just speak one at a time , otherwise it will all get blurry .
10 If half the records on a track have to be moved one at a time , and a device revolution is required for each movement , additions can take a great deal of time .
11 ‘ I did n't feel anything at the time , ’ he continued .
12 Beechams Pills could be bought one at a time in a spill for a penny .
13 This is unavoidable , but it means that you may get the impression that they are also used one at a time .
14 Now tell me what what you 've got one at a time , starting at this end .
15 These are then interpreted one at a time , on a rule of thumb basis .
16 London Transport held very strong views in favour of standardization , so when in 1936 , the ex-Croydon cars were due for an annual overhaul and relicensing , they were withdrawn one at a time and replaced by E/1 Class cars between October 1936 and January 1937 .
17 conclude on the basis of recent work on tachistoscopic word recognition that , at least with single-syllable words exposed one at a time to left or right visual hemifield , artefacts due to directional scanning contribute little if anything to hemifield asymmetry .
18 It only takes one at a time .
19 For this reason , cards should be exchanged one at a time and with some care .
20 The remedy may change , or in acute injuries more than one remedy may be required , but in classical homoeopathy the remedies are administered one at a time and not as a mixture .
21 From the point of view of an application system carrying out final plausibility checks , CLE- I logical forms emerge one at a time , with no scoring information attached , and the application must decide which one to accept using an essentially binary , absolute plausibility test .
22 So we 'll just use the line feed one at a time .
23 I felt nothing at the time and naïvely smiled to myself when I spotted it later .
24 The Crystal Palace tram terminus was on a gradient and it was ruled that if the crew wanted to take their break there , in the busmen 's canteen round the corner on the Parade , they must go one at a time and not leave the car unattended .
25 If we do n't go one at a time nobody 'll be heard .
26 They were hauled alongside and manoeuvred one at a time to a position where they could be hauled aboard , encumbered by their diving equipment .
27 Only keep one at a time , as the adults will fight unless kept in very large tanks .
28 Back home you only ever saw one at a time .
29 He ca n't pay the television licence and tosses up every week between washing powder , toothpaste or soap : " I can only afford one at a time — personal hygiene is an expensive item . "
30 CLE-1 , however , always imposes strong preferences , because of the way that reference candidates are tried one at a time in a depth-first fashion , with backtracking to the next candidate taking place when , and only when , the logical form involving the current one is deemed implausible .
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