GMT

NOUN
  1. the local time at the 0 meridian passing through Greenwich, England; it is the same everywhere
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How To Use GMT In A Sentence

  • The Evening Standard's television critic Victor Lewis-Smith wrote: "I used to think that morning broadcasting could get no worse than TV-am, but GMTV has effortlessly led the way further down-market"; while Mark Steyn in the Mail on Sunday claimed: "It comes on like a local TV-am – same set, but now with new reduced content. History suggests you shouldn't write Daybreak off
  • DeWitt and an Associated Press photographer took off around 1 pm (1700 GMT) on a boat to get close to the swank vacation home Sarkozy was visiting.
  • As a result, all order-driven securities were placed in an auction call period at 1038 GMT Undefined
  • They're not worth the paper they're written on. by aneurin on Mon Mar 23, 2009 at 10: 11: 21 PM GMT Labourhome
  • Likewise, the U. S. West coast time zone is known to most Americans as Pacific Standard Time (PST) zone rather than GMT-8.
  • New Mexico is seven hours behind GMT.
  • The Ooks of Hazard cover MGMT's “Kids” using seven ukuleles, an accordion and a cajon. Lunch break
  • He had become the youngest person to complete a solo transatlantic crossing at 12.50 GMT on Sunday when he was still 15.
  • This spectacular image of our home planet was captured by the OSIRIS instrument on ESA's Rosetta comet chaser today November 12 at 12:28 GMT from about 633,000 km as the spacecraft approached Earth for the third and final swingby. Crescent Earth as Seen by Comet Chasing Spacecraft | Universe Today
  • SWITZERLAND: Commercial flights in and out of Switzerland banned until 1800 GMT Saturday. The Times of India
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