0 a period of days, weeks, months, etc. within which an activity is intended to happen: --
1 a particular period of time in which something must be done: --
put/set a time frame on sth It's hard to put a time-frame on how long it will take to implement the recommendations.
a time frame for doing sth A good project manager must have a solid grasp of the team's workload, productivity, and timeframe for completing the project.
a time frame for sth Yesterday, the troubled airline publicly announced a time frame for a possible liquidation.
within a time frame The company may not meet its targets within the time frame.
The author's observations of the site cover the time frame from 1989 to 1993.
The time frame remains the same, ending in 1958.
Their history was heterotemporal, with more than one time frame at play.
In addition, the time frame within which victimization was measured for this study was 1 year.
Indeed, peer exclusion predicted significantly steeper growth in depressive symptoms across this time frame for boys who were high in social anxiety.
Nevertheless, there are differences, not only with respect to the time frame used during measurement, but also conceptually.
But like the futilityspotters, we have chosen our own time frame.
The reason for the exclusionary policies must, therefore, be sought in secular events closer to the time frame of the guilds' exclusionary manoeuvres.