Example sentences of "[noun] [pron] [vb past] [art] long [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ After seeing the PM you took a long leave and then came back . |
2 | Just to be on the safe side we had a long rope attached to the raft and tied round a tree on the bank so that if the Indians lost control the rope would pull it to a stop . |
3 | Her words themselves broke a long silence . |
4 | It was a fall down the cellar steps of one of these houses which started a long history of back trouble . |
5 | All the machinery was powered by a gas engine which drove a long shaft near the ceiling that in turn , by means of belts to fast and loose pulleys , provided the motive power for the various equipment . |
6 | In the upstairs passage she opened the long case clock , knowing very well it was broken , that the weights had not descended for years and the hands remained at twenty to one . |
7 | Instead he became a national hero who enjoyed a long life … and who died with dignity . |
8 | Some pact they made a long time ago . ’ |
9 | Also on Oct. 17 the Supreme Soviet passed a decree which went a long way towards meeting other student demands , and secured an end to the protests . |
10 | After a wait of about two hours we joined the long crocodile winding through corridors to the ballroom , with anxious ushers ensuring that we were all in the right order of presentation . |
11 | When I returned to Moose Jaw about mid-August I had a long talk with Fred Workman , who told me he had noticed a certain restlessness in me as if I were hoping for a change of scene . |
12 | And this morning I had a long talk with my mother . ’ |
13 | Voluntary organisations in many cases became the effective agents of enforcement , as well as pressure groups constantly campaigning for further intervention , and here they became quasi-state apparatuses , a pattern which had a long history . |
14 | In August we had a long weekend in the Lakes , with Rob , Joyce & Ewan which went well , & also a week in Telford with Richard which we thoroughly enjoyed . |
15 | I well remember our first night with the aid of father-in-law we spent a long day moving ourselves in . |
16 | At any rate it took a long time to synthesize . |
17 | A lot of people seem to refer to Jesus as a good man who lived a long time ago ; a man who taught about God and who became ‘ Son of God ’ by his resurrection . |
18 | When he had vanished from sight she expelled a long sigh and allowed the mask to slip away from her face , slowing returning to her towel and lying down flat on it . |
19 | Abandoning their bicycles they began the long trudge to Emily 's mysterious destination . |
20 | I thought that was a lesson we learnt a long time ago ! ’ |
21 | In his right hand he carried a long machete , but it was the crazed look in his eyes that really shook the young policeman . |
22 | By thus reproducing arguments in favour of unequal pay which had a long pedigree , Amelia McLean 's article showed that she was either unable or unwilling to realize that , apart from anything else , the introduction of Monotype machines within the previous few years had completely redistributed the cards . |
23 | Educated privately at her homes at Parkwern and Hendrefoilan she inherited a long family tradition of unorthodox and innovative ideas . |
24 | After a century there began a long period of sea warfare and skirmishing over the north of Ulthuan . |
25 | He wanted to call her ‘ Mam ’ , the way he had a long time ago , but she said it made her feel middle-aged and dull and ordinary , so he must never say it again , especially when other people were around . |
26 | He 's given me a few jokes but only ones he used a long time ago ! ’ |
27 | For it was he who arranged the finance which went a long way towards putting the station on the air . |
28 | I had agreed to be co-author , but it was not until seven years after his retirement that work could begin , for only then had his committee activities abated to an extent which allowed the long periods necessary for writing and discussion . |
29 | Some of them you remember the table we had a long time ago showing the reactivity of different elements , particularly the metals when we were looking at metals . |
30 | Part of the lease Arthur signed guaranteed him his brewing water free of tax or pipe money , and in this regard he had a long standing feud with the city authorities which lasted over twenty years . |