Time
91time — The basic way of experiencing time is not as a succession of fixed units (e.g. hours), but through three natural cycles: night and day, the moon s phases, and the year. The first is the most immediate, and the most charged with symbolic and… …
92TIME — (Roget s Thesaurus II) Index noun age (2), contemporary (2), delay (2), flash, future, instant, lateness, life, morning, now, occasion …
93time — [OE] Time originally denoted ‘delimited section of existence, period’. Its ultimate source is the Indo European base *dī ‘cut up, divide’. This passed into prehistoric Germanic as *tī (source also of English tide), and addition of the suffix *… …
94time — англ. [тайм] 1) время 2) раз 3) темп 4) ритм ◊ first time [фэст тайм] 1 й раз second time [сэ/кэнд тайм] 2 й раз …
95time is up — the time is over, the time has already passed …
96time's up — there is no more time for the test or game etc. The coach checked his watch and said, Time s up. Stop running …
97time is up — (someone s/something s) time is up an activity is finished. From the day he joined the army to the day his time was up, he was a fine soldier …
98time's up — no more minutes are available. My time s up, and I have to leave now. Time is up on today s quiz hand in your papers …
99time — Noun. A prison sentence. Serving one s time, or doing time …
100-time — full time …