Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [vb pp] a [adj] way " in BNC.
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1 | They also argue that the latest draft of the charter , drawn up by President Mitterrand , has already gone a long way to assuage Mrs Thatcher 's legitimate fears about the loss of British sovereignty . |
2 | The computerised exchange — known as Direct Dialling In ( DDI ) — has already gone a long way to reducing delays for the thousands of callers daily using the Essex Rivers Healthcare Trust switchboards . |
3 | In all , 255 young trees were planted , a huge task which was completed by the garden team at Nymans in ten days and which has already gone a good way towards restoring the diversity of colours , shapes and textures of conifers in their prime . |
4 | The bank has already introduced a novel way of detecting credit crime . |
5 | You money has always gone a long way in Thailand . |
6 | The fact that Smith was utterly and proudly northern and that The Fall has always encapsulated a northern way of life has lead to heavily denied speculation that The Smiths took their name from young Mark . |
7 | No matter how you feed your horse , somebody else ( usually a self confessed expert with little or no qualifications ) has always got a better way . |
8 | The SNP has indeed come a long way since Jim Sillars , as vice-president of the SNP , in a section of his Independence in Europe pamphlet ( June 1989 ) entitled ‘ The David Martin formula ’ , referred to Europe of the regions as a ‘ nebulous concept ’ . |
9 | MICHAEL Roberts has certainly gone a long way towards silencing his critics in the past week . |
10 | Owen Barfield , both in conversation and in writing , had already gone a long way in revealing to Lewis the fallacy of making sharp distinctions between ‘ myth ’ and ‘ fact ’ . |
11 | Mota had already come a long way since her schooldays when she ran away with the city , area and national cross-country championships . |
12 | Goldthorpe thought that , if they had not adopted a middle-class way of life , then it was unlikely that any other working-class people had done so . |
13 | Well , I 've just seen a new way forward |
14 | Brothers , sisters , President , we 've still got a long way to go . |
15 | However , we 've still got a long way to go on working together with the health service ’ . |
16 | I know that some British civil servants are making considerable efforts to improve erm in these terms but erm I think we 've still got a long way to go in appreciating the importance of at least being able to understand somebody else 's language , erm even if you ca n't always erm communicate in it as well as you can in your own . |
17 | If you 're like me you 've still got a fair way to go ! |
18 | I do n't know , they 've probably gone a different way today |
19 | From being a simple pleasure that had helped take her mind off her troubles , it had now gone a long way towards restoring her rather battered pride . |
20 | ‘ Well , you 've certainly come a long way from the child who ran from me in that garden . ’ |
21 | Well , we 've certainly come a long way since Pliny 's day . |
22 | He does , in his own way , care for the club and football — he 's just got a funny way of showing it . ’ |
23 | I do n't know , there 's still got a long way to go though |
24 | ‘ We English have often had a different way of looking at such things from the French , Mr Lewis . ’ |
25 | We have indeed come a long way from 1882 , and can look forward to the challenge of the 1990s — the closer harmonisation of our concerns with those of other conservation bodies . |
26 | We have certainly come a long way since Aristotle and Ptolemy , when we thought that the earth was the centre of the universe ! |
27 | It 's certainly come a long way from the upstairs room at the Albert . |