Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 25, 2013 · "Time's up" is very similar to the phrase "time's run out." It conveys an environment where time is a limited resource and someone is attempting to accomplish a particular task before the resource is used up or runs out. Time's up! Put your pencils down and pass your exams forward. I barely finished my exam before time was up.

  2. Jun 29, 2018 · To say that time's up should be associated with increased (sense 3 b or 3 d) rather than a different sense—in particular those it actually relates to—seems arbitrary. It's use may actually make perfect sense. To fully answer this, you'd have to know what senses were defined (or in use) when the phrase your time is up was actually coined.

  3. - "Times up" 表示特定时间限制已经到了,意味着时间结束。 - "Time up" 指的是时间已经用完或到期,具有类似的含义。 例句: - The exam is over, time's up!(考试结束了,时间到了!) - The parking meter shows time up, you need to move your car.(停车计时器显示时间已到,你需要移 ...

  4. 主持人不常说,因为Time's up, s与up连读后,干净有力,简短.生动点. 3)Time out.或Time is out. 对比三种说法, Time's up强调时间到的那瞬间.up是接近的意思.刚好接近到完了.后两种就没有这么"生感".只是一种说明. 顺便说一下, Time is coming,Time is coming up, 是"时间就要到了"的意思 ...

  5. Ghost film involving the background of scenes lining up to create the appearance of a person, and then that person moving How to remove the DUAL BIOS logo from the GA-G31M-ES2L boot screen? Is it possible to write every real function as the sum of an injection and a surjection?

  6. Apr 22, 2017 · In the first sentence time refers to the amount of seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, years, decades, centuries, millennia and so on. This noun is uncountable. In example (2) times refers to the number of occurrences. The number of instances that something happened. This is the same type of time as in " I asked her three times ".

  7. May 8, 2014 · 1. at that time: during a specific time in the past ( last week, last month etc) that time: on that specific occasion. Share. Improve this answer. Follow. answered May 8, 2014 at 5:55. user66974 user66974. Add a comment.

  8. Mar 15, 2018 · 1. There were probably many items that needed to be up to code, each with a different lead-in time. – Xanne. Mar 15, 2018 at 4:21. Either is grammatical (look up "distributive singular" in an in-house search) but 'times' strongly suggests complex stratification (different lead-in times in different conditions / areas ...). – Edwin Ashworth.

  9. 5. It should be until the end of time. The time here is referring to the entirety of time itself, from the Creation until the end of the world, perhaps. Time here is not countable, so you cannot use times. Time in this sense is not countable. In other senses, of course, it is.

  10. And on its relatonship to the American version, third time's the charm: This may be an variant of the earlier 'third time lucky' or it may have arisen independently in the USA. A citation is given of this phrase from 1912. EDIT: Please don't vote this answer up. Google Books tells a different story. See my other answer.