Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] a [adj] way [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | For the 30-year-old air liaison officer with the British force in the Croatian port of Split has introduced a novel way to get around . |
2 | This minor impediment for the flanker is just sufficient to allow a fraction more time and space for the half-back to get things moving and has gone a long way to assist in opening the game up . |
3 | I think the Home Secretary has gone a long way to meet many anxieties which were expressed |
4 | The addition of the words " The Editor " are still not going to solve the problem , since the editor of a national Newspaper is hardly likely to be interested in the launch a new kettle or the fact that your organisation has discovered a new way to process cheese ! |
5 | But he said : ’ You endeavoured to go a long way to cover your tracks by disposing of the apparatus . |
6 | I listened with fascination to this insider viewpoint , and the moody Miss Brickell suddenly became a real person , not a pathetic collection of dry bones , but a mixed-up pulsating young woman full of strong urges and stronger guilts who 'd piled on too much pressure , loaded her need of penitence and her heavy desires and perhaps finally her pregnancy onto someone who could n't bear it all , and who 'd seen a violent way to escape her . |
7 | ‘ You would have to go a long way to see a better game than that . |
8 | If I could have seen a respectable way to dismiss this appeal I should have been happy to do so . |
9 | And I think it w w was quite difficult for people because they 'd either have to walk a long way to try and make a telephone call . |
10 | If she had said no he would have had a long way to jump . |
11 | Although you might have driven a long way to get there , do n't put yourself into a situation you ca n't handle . |
12 | He liked to find a safe way to get an accurate hit thus sustaining as little damage to the plane as possible . |
13 | She really did have a long way to go , and she had not yet learned to recognise the precise lineaments , the demeanour and the shape of the shadow of Stan . |
14 | Japan seemed to have invented a new way to create ultra-cheap money . |
15 | ‘ I 've been trying to find a tactful way to drop him for ages . ’ |
16 | ‘ You 've come a long way to do just that . ’ |
17 | I 've come a long way to make a reconciliation with him , and I do n't want interference from some snooty cocktail waitress . |
18 | ‘ I 've got a long way to go before I 'm thirty , ’ she 'd say . |
19 | You 've got a long way to go before you can set up on your own . |
20 | As I say you 've er , you 've got a long way to go , okay , fine thank you . |
21 | mm , I 've got a long way to go yet then have I ? |
22 | It does n't need me to say that we 've got a long way to go . |
23 | You 've got a long way to travel . |
24 | It does seem a sensible way to approach things , possibly . |
25 | Then the Bishop firmly gripped the King 's tunic round his chest and shook it violently , saying again , " You owe me a kiss because I have come a long way to see you . " |
26 | First we felt that women have come a long way given the very radical and novel nature of their demands to enter public life as individuals in their own right . |
27 | He 's got a long way to go home , ’ said Ray Shepherd quietly . |
28 | The birth was on July 1st and at 7 lb 7 oz he 's got a long way to go to catch up to dad . |
29 | Gemma 's got a long way to go before she gets to eighty |
30 | Phil 's got a long way to go actually |