Example sentences of "[verb] [to-vb] [art] long [noun] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | The centre 's directors recognise that the price of a microcomputer still has to fall a long way before the machines can play an important role in Third World education . |
2 | She seemed to wait a long time before she heard footsteps within , and then a light sprang up beyond the frosted glass . |
3 | Commuters to the capital obviously decided to take a long weekend or were put up in hotels overnight by their employers , said a spokesman . |
4 | The hooligan , however , tends to have the longer career since part of his art lies in knowing how far to ‘ push his luck ’ . |
5 | Citing cases , though usually a necessary part of the moot , tends to take a long time and to be boring for the audience . |
6 | Formed in teams , this task it was then to er across the practice areas whose task it was to get into those clients , get to know them , get to know their industry , get to know the people and find ways in which we could actually penetrate them and er open doors and that was going to take a long time and it is taking a long time . |
7 | If you are wearing trousers you 'll have to wear a long top so it does n't show anything . ’ |
8 | But there are particular areas like this , you having to wait a long time and if you come into the building to go and see a film and you 've you 've left an hour to , to have some food you , you really should n't be missing the film because |
9 | Unlike the fourth floor of Lloyd 's , it has a purpose-built trading floor , but the exchange might have to sign a longer lease than it needs . |
10 | But er we , we had quite a difficulty , very , very difficult , we used to have to walk a long way before we could get to a telephone . |
11 | She explained that with some people one had to wait a long time before one saw what one wanted to see . |
12 | We had to wait a long time because I had my mother to look after and she was rather difficult . ’ |