period of time

NOUN
  1. an amount of time
    a time period of 30 years
    hastened the period of time of his recovery
    Picasso's blue period
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How To Use period of time In A Sentence

  • A great deal of work had had to be condensed into a relatively short period of time.
  • _ When a scirrhus affects any gland of no great extent or sensibility, it is, after a long period of time, liable to suppurate without inducing fever, like the indolent tumors of the conglobate or lymphatic glands above mentioned; whence collections of matter are often found after death both in men and other animals; as in the liver of swine, which have been fed with the grounds of fermented mixtures in the distilleries. Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • Symptoms need to have been present for a prolonged period of time for a true diagnosis to be made.
  • During that period of time, he made numerous court appearances, sometimes unrepresented and other times represented by counsel.
  • The convention allows for lawful detention of children for the shortest possible period of time and as a matter of last resort.
  • The severity, universality, complexity of peasant burden overweight, is to determined fundamentally that solving peasant burden overweight needs long period of time and arduousness of problem.
  • A period of time elapses before the full effects of your action is felt.
  • The granite peaks and sylvan hollows in the Blue Ridge Mountains are the results of geological changes and metamorphosis over perhaps a billion year period of time.
  • My position on euthanasia is actually derived from the ancient Greek one; that is, I am generally in favour of allowing it, as long as the person being euthanized is in perfectly sound mental condition, not non compos mentis, and has positively re-affirmed his decision at least three times over the period of at least a suspended period of time to allow for reconsideration (say 15 or 30 days). Matthew Yglesias » Bishops and Abortion
  • The phrase "axial age" has been used to describe the relatively brief period of time -- roughly 700 years -- when the great religions of the world arose: Hinduism and Buddhism in India; Confucianism and Taoism in China; and monotheism in the Middle East. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
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