Time in a sentence as a noun

Thank them for taking the time to interview you.

If you delay it, it'll be ten times as much work as just doing it correctly up front.

But this isn't just a one-time constant increase.

It can be worth even more if Larry Page is dying of thirst at the same time and starts a bidding war.

* The earlier in your career it is now, the more important this time is for your development.

You devote time and energy to a technology only to have it fail when you need it most.

Quora has now spent several years training me to be bummed out every time I click on a link to their site.

I worked at Amazon from before Steve left to sometime later.

These folks sometimes take on "thought leader" positions, act as architects or whatnot.

He's doing that all the time, of course, and people scramble like ants being pounded with a rubber mallet whenever it happens.

I don't know what the ultimate solution to this problem is, but now is clearly the time for Airbnb to get moving on it...]

Every time it happens, I dislike them more, and become more resistant to creating an account.

The money isn't always better in these other fields, but sometimes the job satisfaction is.

Time in a sentence as a verb

[1] It wasn't just me either, by the time I left, %60 of the team had already gotten internal transfers or resigned.

Some people love this work, they can stay useful and "in the game", but some hate it because it comes with the cachet of being stale and not keeping up with the times.

Most of the time the reporters overstate the research, the scientists keep the data secret, and the general public is left scratching their heads.

As the main developer of VLC, we know about this story since a long time, and this is just Dell putting **** components on their machine and blaming others.

I would be very depressed on projects, make slow progress, at times get into a mode where I was much of the time pretending progress simply because I could not bring myself to do the work.

Paragraph 14 on page 34 is pretty typical: It says, in effect, "you'd better take your best shot at contesting this rejection now, Apple, because the next time around it will be a final rejection."7.

It seems that they go a few directions:The most common seems to be to try and generalize, because relearning most of your job skills every few years starts to get annoying the 20th time you've had to do it.

And their operations are a mess; they don't really have SREs and they make engineers pretty much do everything, which leaves almost no time for coding - though again this varies by group, so it's luck of the draw.

From the time Bezos issued his edict through the time I left, Amazon had transformed culturally into a company that thinks about everything in a services-first fashion.

During that time, the female arresting officer would periodically come by to taunt me, and tell me that I shouldn't have questioned her, and then threw a huge tantrum when I requested not to be touched by her for fingerprinting.

If each bounce goes through a team with a 15-minute response time, it can be hours before the right team finally finds out, unless you build a lot of scaffolding and metrics and reporting.- every single one of your peer teams suddenly becomes a potential DOS attacker.

I remember at the time reading newspaper articles claiming this was "just going to be used to keep ***** off the streets" and how "law enforcement are outgunned and now can defend themselves against drug dealers".It was obvious to me then that this was a violation of due process.

During that entire time, her article stood with a very prominent notice saying it was going to be deleted, with a prominent link allowing people to argue in favor of keeping or, better yet, locate a real reliable source backing up any claim to her notability.

Time definitions

noun

an instance or single occasion for some event; "this time he succeeded"; "he called four times"; "he could do ten at a clip"

See also: clip

noun

a period of time considered as a resource under your control and sufficient to accomplish something; "take time to smell the roses"; "I didn't have time to finish"; "it took more than half my time"

noun

an indefinite period (usually marked by specific attributes or activities); "he waited a long time"; "the time of year for planting"; "he was a great actor in his time"

noun

a suitable moment; "it is time to go"

noun

the continuum of experience in which events pass from the future through the present to the past

noun

a person's experience on a particular occasion; "he had a time holding back the tears"; "they had a good time together"

noun

a reading of a point in time as given by a clock; "do you know what time it is?"; "the time is 10 o'clock"

noun

the fourth coordinate that is required (along with three spatial dimensions) to specify a physical event

noun

rhythm as given by division into parts of equal duration

See also: meter metre

noun

the period of time a prisoner is imprisoned; "he served a prison term of 15 months"; "his sentence was 5 to 10 years"; "he is doing time in the county jail"

See also: sentence

verb

measure the time or duration of an event or action or the person who performs an action in a certain period of time; "he clocked the runners"

See also: clock

verb

assign a time for an activity or event; "The candidate carefully timed his appearance at the disaster scene"

verb

set the speed, duration, or execution of; "we time the process to manufacture our cars very precisely"

verb

regulate or set the time of; "time the clock"

verb

adjust so that a force is applied and an action occurs at the desired time; "The good player times his swing so as to hit the ball squarely"