Example sentences of "it was time [pron] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Because my aunt — Emily 's mother — thought it was time we … ’ he gestured to Emily , who was peeling off her eggshell , ‘ … time we met . ’
2 And erm we 've got this big rally er which a fortnight ago Julie suggested that we had a rally I think she thought er you know that it was time we a the public profile up sort of thing .
3 She said it was time something was done .
4 It was time they stopped designing buildings without a thought for the people who had to live in them , he said .
5 It was time they transferred their attentions from ‘ the municipal privy ’ to suites at top hotels where those sort of drugs deals are carried out .
6 She took in the scene and told Seth it was time they straightened out .
7 Already the warmth was draining from the air and he knew that it was time they were moving .
8 It seemed to Annie that no sooner had Tamar arrived in the market hall , than Goodison was by her side , suggesting that it was time they started off for home .
9 Carrie was afraid at first that Albert would despise such a babyish pastime but he seemed to enjoy it as much as Nick did , shouting with laughter when he tripped over bumps in the ice and not wanting to stop , even when she said it was time they were going .
10 It was time they were down .
11 It was time they all had a holiday .
12 Perhaps , thought Theodora dispassionately , it was time they had to answer advertisements for their posts , satisfy a set of agreed criteria and become answerable to those who paid for their upkeep .
13 At last the golden afternoon was over , and Robbie heard with regret Fen 's decree that it was time they returned to Water Gypsy .
14 Leith and Sebastian had been in their flat a month when Sebastian declared it was time they had a flat-warming party .
15 She did n't , actually , but if there was n't a proverb to fit then it was time someone wrote one .
16 It was time his mother felt the same kind of distress , the same feeling of being rootless ; after all , that woman had stolen her father away .
17 Prime Minister Paias Wingti , questioned in parliament on the need for continued links with Britain , said it was time his country reviewed its constitution after 17 years of independence .
18 Over his shoulder she glanced at the clock over the door — the hands seemed to be moving very fast and she was reluctant to say it was time she was going .
19 her uncle and aunt decided it was time she took a husband , their choice for her being Manfro Draper , a posh-rat like herself .
20 It was time she dressed and saw to his meal .
21 It was time she surfaced and told him what she was up to .
22 Jessamy woke up on the morning of her twenty-fourth birthday and decided it was time she put her life in order .
23 It was time she also called it a day ; she would continue with the work she was doing after she 'd eaten .
24 This time Reception said they had run out of vases and , whatever he 'd done , did n't she think it was time she forgave him ?
25 Dame Sybil earned her everlasting gratitude by suggesting that it was time she retire .
26 It was time she did a bit of hurting , too .
27 Perhaps her family were right ; maybe it was time she settled down .
28 He made quite a fuss about it , saying it was time she left the nest , stood up to the forceful Elise and lived her own life .
29 Regret not seeing Prague though she might , perhaps , she began to wonder whether it was time she returned to England .
30 I thought it was time you got involved in it too , my friend .
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