An unexpected extension of time. It often refers to someone terminally ill or in great danger but surviving longer than was anticipated, on time that is in effect borrowed from Death. The term dates from the late 1800s. Raymond Chandler used it in The Big Sleep (1930):
“Brody was living on borrowed time.” James Patterson also had it, referring
to the 48-hour deadline for a threatened bombing attack: “We were defi-
nitely operating on borrowed time” (London Bridges, 2004).
Three individuals have been apprehended in the case of the lithium pools,
according to the Prosecutor's Office.
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So far, three individuals have been apprehended in the investigation into
the industrial evaporation pools of Bolivian Lithium Deposits (YLB),
reported ...
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