Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Sometimes the orders get made, but the executions take a few Real Time days.
(They did gain an impressive article in the financial section of The Times days before the vote itself).
Since the time days of Bentham, the "premier systematic botanist of the nineteenth century"
Full time days."
He consulted the luminous hands of his wristwatch, which he had set to Mountain time days ago, before the arts festival in Tucson.
While working full time days, he attended night school at Northeastern University and completed an MBA one month before being laid-off from his first real job.
HANG TIME Days and Dreams With Michael Jordan.
My other half wears Converse boots in blue on his down time days which I like, but as he's a few years younger than me he can just about get away with it.
Allison Leiter told The Los Angeles Times days after her son's death that she had feared the moment, but was comforted because "he looked so beautiful, just like an angel."
The last time he had been to this specific Period he had spent five Real Time days howling like a jungle cat before realizing that the Planet-Hoppers thought the wind made the sound.
The Jackson-Browns were first profiled in The New York Times days after the storm, as they pushed the four children on a skycap's cart through a sweltering line at the New Orleans airport.
In contrast to the wooden, fearful ministers of old, members of the new congress, prodded by the live television coverage, have begun reserving speaking time days in advance in their sudden discovery of the new electronic rostrum.
Iranian filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf, the official spokesman of Mir-Hossein Moussavi's campaign abroad, told BBC in an interview that Iranian secret police had called Seyed Ali Mousavi several times days before he was shot saying: "We will kill you."
Nyle Brenner, Berman's manager, said to the Los Angeles Times days after the murder that "many details of Ms. Berman's personal life are unclear" and added "she had been married once in the 1980s, and later helped rear the two children of a boyfriend."
In an Op-Ed article in The New York Times days after the 1992 abortion decision, Judge Bork himself said sarcastically that the joint opinion was "intensely popular" with the media, law school faculties, and "at least 90 percent of the people Justices may meet at Washington dinner parties."