Similar words: from time to time, sometime, sometimes, some time or other, for some time past, to come, prime time, come to. Meaning: n. the time yet to come.
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2. These plans take time to come to fruition.
3. Don't expect too much of me.I need time to come round to this new idea.
4. I thought it was time to come clean about what I'd been doing.
5. It has taken him a long time to come to terms with his disability.
6. Could you spare some time to come to our art exhibition?
6. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
7. Don't expect too much of me. I need time to come around to this new idea.
8. This will be a problem for some time to come .
9. If this was the end then she needed time to come to terms with it by herself.
10. Mike : Time to come clean.
11. In time to come, we may even have to forsake the familiar paper currency.
12. Our best strategy is patience, allowing her time to come out of hiding.
13. In a period of time to come, the process of the "four-party talks"will determine the changes in the situation and the formation of the structure on the Korean Peninsular.
14. The decision was certain to affect the trajectory of French politics for some time to come.
15. The price of houses is not likely to fall below the present level for some time to come.
16. Fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas will service our needs for some considerable time to come.
17. Labor shortages were not going to be driving up wages for a long time to come.
18. And its impact is set to reverberate around theatreland for some time to come.
19. The shelter was quite a long way away, and there wouldn't be time to come back to the steps.
20. And I knew that I'd be seeing it in my more dejected moments for a long time to come.
21. Above all, they will need your loving understanding and support for some time to come.
22. Since it presumably means we will not for some time to come be seeing her again stretched horizontal on a sun lounger.
23. May the Town Crier remain in the very capable hands of the college students and lecturers for a long time to come.
24. The basic line must be followed unswervingly for a very long time to come.
25. An incendiary bomb would leave a fire behind; a nuclear bomb would leave lingering traces of radiation in the victim for a long time to come.
26. Taiwan's economy is likely to stagnate for a long time to come.
27. Similarly, your project doesn't have enough time to do something right, so you hack a just-in-time solution and hope to use some future time to come back and retrofit it.
28. The material supplies in the world will be far from enough to support the human population, in time to come, if the present rate of increase continues.
29. Mr. Mandela appealed to others who had worked for the South African authorities of the time to come forward with any valuable documents and mementoes they might still own.
30. Even if officials around America do promulgate fierce regulations, those will take some time to come into force, and are bound to be the subject of endless lawsuits.
More similar words: from time to time, sometime, sometimes, some time or other, for some time past, to come, prime time, come to, hometown, come together, come to life, come to pass, come to mind, timetable, time table, altimeter, come to grief, come to an end, come to a stop, come to a head, come to blows, come to grips, come to terms, come to light, come to the fore, centimetre, time-tested, centimeter, come to naught, come to nothing.