Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Oct 15, 2012 · I think "time's up" is correct. It's a contraction for "time is up" (obviously). "Time up" seems to have no verb. It's just a noun and a preposition. Perhaps games that use "time up" are made in non-English-speaking countries. Foreign games often have slight missteps in colloquialisms.

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. Jul 20, 2018 · Martin Manser, The Facts on File Dictionary of Proverbs (2002) has this entry for the expression: the third time is the charm According to popular superstition, success will come at the third attempt: After two aborted missions, N.A.S.A. is hoping that the third time is the charm.

  6. Apr 22, 2017 · How much time did you spend in Spain? He punched me three times. In the first sentence time refers to the amount of seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, years, decades, centuries, millennia and so on.

  7. May 24, 2018 · The existing answers don't entirely line up with my experiences in American English, though it may simply be more regional or contextual than I've seen. The paper containing questions for an exam would most likely be called simply the exam , though "exam sheet" would be understandable, and when answers are made on separate paper (which isn't always the case) then question sheet(s) is an option ...

  8. "Time's up" and "time's out" have the same meaning. They both mean that there is no time left. However, "time out" can mean a short break or pause from something. For example: "Anna is taking time out from studying." (Anna is taking a break from studying.) "The coach called for a timeout during the basketball game to speak with his team." (The ...

  9. May 11, 2011 · If you worked on it yesterday, stopped yesterday before finishing then, and don't want to say anything else about whether you will or can continue or not, but more likely that you are done for good (like a one-time test), then:

  10. Aug 4, 2017 · The most commonly used one is "third time's a charm". I googled it and couldn't find "three time's a charm" in usage. So is "three time's a charm" considered incorrect?