noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
early August/January etc
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Italy is lovely in early June, before it gets too hot.
morning/autumnal/January etc chill
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Suddenly aware of the morning chill, she closed the window.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
early
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BGovernment officials say it is unlikely that anything will stop the project from being officially approved as early as January .
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In early January , Detroit is truly the center of the automotive universe.
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That all changed in early January .
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In early January , my wife got herself snowed in on the East Coast.
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For six weeks beginning in early January 1935 the trial progressed, followed in every detail by more than three hundred newsmen.
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Then it was back on to a plane in early January of 1965 for another six weeks on tour.
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If federal approval is gained soon, the trial could start as early as January .
late
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It was only late in January that Primorye's stoic population began to protest.
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The Alsop-Kiritner team completed the series in late January 1940 and submitted it to the Post.
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Mr Ellison also sold, in late January , seven million shares that he already owned.
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By late January , it stopped.
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About 40 were scheduled to have traveled there between November and late January .
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He became well-known in an unexpected fashion locally in late January 1993.
■ VERB
begin
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The 1969 Tet Offensive is best seen as part of a larger, sustained enemy campaign that began in January 1968.
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The levy, which began on January 1, has met with fierce opposition from the trade unions.
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The process began in January 1942 when Churchill and his military leaders came to Washington to discuss strategy.
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Delegates had set a November deadline for completing the negotiations in Geneva, which began in January 1995.
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Troilus is a new open-pit mine in Quebec that began production in January .
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Even before it began on January 1st, problems arose.
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The first units began arriving in January 1966, and its last unit left in the spring of 1971.
die
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Murmuring these same words he was to die on January 30, 1948.
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Anne died on January 4, at the age of 62.
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Eddie Diamond died in January , 1930.
open
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It is one of the reasons Mimosa has become one of the most popular restaurants in town since it opened last January .
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Paul, Minnesota, where it opened on January 8, 1974.
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Some of the ads do call the Whitefish brewery, which opened in January 1995, new.
publish
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He got a new agent, and Random House bought the book, publishing it in January 1994.
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Directories are published in January , March, May and June.
release
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He was released from prison in January after serving nearly seven months of an 18-month sentence.
start
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The charges will start in January 2003, a year ahead of the next mayoral election.
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The team, suiting up just eight players, started January by dropping five games.
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Work was originally planned to start on site in January .
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The government said today that consumer confidence in December plumbed its lowest level ever since consumer surveys started , in January 1987.
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Work will start in January 2001.
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Current employees would be asked to contribute more toward retirement, starting in January 1999.
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Under the one-year concession starting in January 2000, Sydvasten will operate six trains each way, serving nine stations.
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The state Department of Water and Power has spent as much as $ 3 billion since it started purchasing electricity in January .
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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A different cast sings in January .
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About three in 10 respondents said they are better off than when Clinton took office in January 1993&.
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Cityline offers these sound bites, which will remain in these categories until at least Monday, January 29.
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Consumer confidence fell for the fourth month in a row in January , hitting its lowest level in four years.
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Quirot, third at Barcelona, suffered severe burns when her home was set ablaze by a lamp in January 1993.
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Seagram reached a similar settlement with Heublein on more clearly listed ingredients in January .