Table of Contents
1. part-time
adjective. ['ˈpɑːrtˈtaɪm'] involving less than the standard or customary time for an activity.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Rhymes with Time Period
- .period
- myriad
Sentences with time-period
1. Noun Phrase
However, visualization is difficult when you are discussing a time period in which there are no recorded images.
2. Noun Phrase
You can use that money for any purpose during that time period.
3. Noun Phrase
Use the See orders from drop-down to select a time period to view.
4. Noun Phrase
Use the Period drop-down to show history within a specific time period.
2. period
noun. ['ˈpɪriːəd'] an amount of time.
Synonyms
- incubation period
- fundamental measure
- schooltime
- clotting time
- fortnight
- term
- reign
- usance
- hebdomad
- morning
- daytime
- night
- canicule
- rainy day
- time frame
- time of life
- time
- youth
- dog days
- Olympiad
- millenary
- prehistoric culture
- mid-April
- calendar month
- overtime
- drouth
- forenoon
- Indian summer
- decade
- quarter-century
- hours
- phase of the moon
- midwinter
- weekend
- life
- Platonic year
- indiction
- sleep
- bimillennium
- efflorescence
- mid-February
- lunar time period
- twelvemonth
- continuance
- dark
- tide
- morn
- wartime
- downtime
- work time
- week
- quarter
- duty tour
- nighttime
- peak
- run
- life-time
- prehistory
- years
- epoch
- mid-May
- mid-January
- stage
- term of enlistment
- hitch
- year
- quadrennium
- flush
- civil day
- noviciate
- enlistment
- eve
- bimillenary
- yr
- millennium
- time period
- honeymoon
- lustrum
- blossom
- evening
- running time
- mid-October
- question time
- time of year
- lifespan
- occupation
- period of time
- day
- semester
- air alert
- lease
- Saint Martin's summer
- prohibition
- dawn
- time limit
- bimester
- tour
- decennium
- mid-March
- half-century
- generation
- regulation time
- duration
- mid-December
- study hall
- daylight
- bronze age
- test period
- tour of duty
- long haul
- multistage
- silly season
- long time
- puerperium
- prime
- mid-November
- watch
- mid-August
- drought
- midweek
- two weeks
- trimester
- mid-September
- heyday
- time off
- calendar week
- lifetime
- era
- month
- uptime
- past
- bloom
- great year
- century
- phase
- quinquennium
- nap
- lactation
- window
- age
- season
- hour
- calendar day
- canicular days
- shelf life
- festival
- real time
- hospitalization
- morning time
- term of a contract
- flower
- prohibition era
- early days
- iron age
- fundamental quantity
- elapsed time
- school
- silver age
- bout
- half-life
- travel time
- long run
- novitiate
- field day
- half life
- mid-July
- Golden Age
- extra time
- peacetime
- trial period
- times
- school day
- decennary
Etymology
- periode (Middle English (1100-1500))
- periode (Middle French (ca. 1400-1600))
3. time
noun. ['ˈtaɪm'] an instance or single occasion for some event.
Antonyms
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
4. time
noun. ['ˈtaɪm'] a period of time considered as a resource under your control and sufficient to accomplish something.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
5. time
noun. ['ˈtaɪm'] an indefinite period (usually marked by specific attributes or activities).
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
7. time
noun. ['ˈtaɪm'] the continuum of experience in which events pass from the future through the present to the past.
Synonyms
- universal time
- eternity
- local time
- attribute
- UT
- daylight-saving time
- present
- duration
- standard time
- Greenwich Time
- infinity
- daylight savings
- past times
- daylight-savings time
- musical time
- UT1
- biological time
- daylight saving
- civil time
- time to come
- nowadays
- geological time
- continuum
- GMT
- geologic time
- hereafter
- cosmic time
- futurity
- yesteryear
- future
- past
- continuance
Antonyms
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
8. time
noun. ['ˈtaɪm'] a person's experience on a particular occasion.
Antonyms
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
9. time
noun. ['ˈtaɪm'] a reading of a point in time as given by a clock.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))