The correct phrase is "time flies". This idiom is used to express how time seems to pass quickly.
As time flies is grammatically correct.
Time Flies By was created on 2006-11-10.
Time Flies - film - was created in 1944.
latter, first diminutive of "goodbye"
The phrase is spelled "Time flies." It means that things happen more quickly than we expect, and in retrospect, a long passage of time seems shorter.
Time Flies... The Best Of was created on 1996-10-29.
Because flies time when they're having fun.
Simply by itself 'tempus fugit', meaning 'time flees', is an entire sentence. I'd translate it as 'time flies', though to conform with the cliché, although it is not the literal translation. If you want to use it as part of a larger sentence, simply substitute the two Latin words where you would normally put the two English words 'time flies'.
Time Flies - 1913 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
from the flies on the soft watches in Salvador Dali's masterpiece The Persistence of Memory watches,clocks = time and the flies are actual insects.
Well, I heard of time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana. This is a pun meaning a fruit fly likes bananas.