Time
91time-on — /taɪm ˈɒn/ (say tuym on) noun 1. resumption of play (in a football game, etc.) after time out. 2. Sport the extra time added to a period of play to account for time lost during stoppage of play …
92time — The basic way of experiencing time is not as a succession of fixed units (e.g. hours), but through three natural cycles: night and day, the moon s phases, and the year. The first is the most immediate, and the most charged with symbolic and… …
93time — /taɪm/ noun 1. a period during which something takes place, e.g. one hour, two days, fifty minutes, etc. 2. a period before something happens ♦ to keep within the time limits or within the time schedule to complete work by the time stated …
94time — /taɪm/ noun 1. a period during which something takes place, e.g. one hour, two days or fifty minutes 2. the number of hours worked 3. a period before something happens ♦ to keep within the time limits or within the time schedule to complete work… …
95time — statements of the time of day are made in various ways in different countries. To avoid confusion in international communications, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) established (in 1986) International Standard 8601… …
96TIME — (Roget s Thesaurus II) Index noun age (2), contemporary (2), delay (2), flash, future, instant, lateness, life, morning, now, occasion …
97time — [OE] Time originally denoted ‘delimited section of existence, period’. Its ultimate source is the Indo European base *dī ‘cut up, divide’. This passed into prehistoric Germanic as *tī (source also of English tide), and addition of the suffix *… …
98time — англ. [тайм] 1) время 2) раз 3) темп 4) ритм ◊ first time [фэст тайм] 1 й раз second time [сэ/кэнд тайм] 2 й раз …
99time is up — the time is over, the time has already passed …
100time's up — there is no more time for the test or game etc. The coach checked his watch and said, Time s up. Stop running …