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betimes

[ UK /bɪtˈa‍ɪmz/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in good time
    he awoke betimes that morning

How To Use betimes In A Sentence

  • Phoebe contributed little to the talk, as a good deal of it was in Dutch and she felt sure that anything she might have to say would bear little weight with Corina, She offered more coffee, undertook to see that both her guests would be called betimes and asked diffidently if she could help Corina to pack. A Summer Idyll
  • According to clients'requests, Xian Yong can improve and produce products betimes with cheap prices.
  • he awoke betimes that morning
  • ‘There is no Terry Spencer here,’ I said, only to discover an apologetic police officer now asking for Mr Joseph, saying betimes: ‘We have a lot of reports.’
  • Up betimes, my wife having a mind to have gone abroad with me, but I had not because of troubling me, and so left her, though against my will, to go and see her father and mother by herself.
  • Waves so high that they disappeared into clouds, gales that betimes lifted the boat from the very sea, rain and hail, all manner of precipitation.
  • A serious admonition to prepare for death and judgment, and to begin betimes, even in the days of our youth, to do so, ver. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • a sprinkled smell, in the light flit, over the garden-floor, of bareheaded girls with the buckled strap of oblong boxes, in the type of ancient thrifty persons basking betimes where terrace-walls were warm, in the blue-frocked brass-labelled officialism of humble rakers and scrapers, in the deep references of a straight-pacing priest or the sharp ones of a white-gaitered red-legged soldier. The Ambassadors
  • He rose betimes in the morning.
  • He rose betimes in the morning.
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