Example sentences of "[noun] have [vb pp] [art] [adj] way " in BNC.

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1 Indeed the latest text has gone a long way towards meeting the UK 's objections . ’
2 VICTIM SUPPORT has come a long way from the six-month experiment set up 10 years ago by a group of concerned professionals in Bristol .
3 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 .
4 ICI has introduced a new way of recycling toxic waste by processing it through seven reed beds planted next to one of Europe 's largest chemical plants at Billingham , Teeside .
5 ICI has found a successful way of dealing with this waste without causing any harm to the public in the form of emissions from incineration , so perhaps there is good news to come .
6 However , official teaching has gone the other way , becoming increasingly restrictive in its emphasis on the grounds that the sharing of communion is acceptable only as an expression , and not as a cause of unity .
7 The industry has come a long way since the day 's of men selling cornets from the back of bicycles .
8 One-room living has come a long way from the old bed-sitter image with its general note of poverty and desperation .
9 And in fact patient research has gone a long way towards resolving this knotty problem .
10 But by the third edition Spock had withdrawn a longish way from the doctrine that natural loving care cures all ills .
11 The tramp choked a little , as if the gum he accepted and popped into his mouth had gone the wrong way .
12 Many organizations have gone the whole way and created entirely different systems for each of these needs .
13 The only difficulty you might face is in getting the right look — doors that match the style of your house — but manufacturers have come a long way from the early aluminium-framed types , and a range of styles is now available .
14 But manufacturers have come a long way from the aluminium-framed picture windows that disfigured so many homes in the early days of the replacement window boom , and a wide range of window styles is now available .
15 But if the means of communication have moved in a more public direction , the images have gone the other way .
16 Cuba has gone a long way to reducing gender inequalities , though power relations still clearly favour men , a fact of which all Cubans , including their leaders , are very aware .
17 Mr Fallon said : ‘ The Dyslexia Institute has come a long way since 1973 and has raised the profile of dyslexia in the country .
18 The CNAA had come a long way since 1964 : ‘ from being a shy bureaucracy it has become an important and an innovatory force in higher education ’ .
19 Washington had come a long way from the converted house of 1835 , the charmingly simple Italianate villa of 1851 , or even the pleasingly revivalist Baltimore and Potomac of 1873–7 .
20 The Inspirals have come a long way from 1989 's full-tilt three-minute organ romp early days .
21 Maggie 's gone the opposite way from Tesco 's ; her heels are sinking into grass .
22 I merely note that other European countries have found an alternative way of living which , as it happens , for whatever reason , has resulted in their enjoying higher standards of living than on the whole do EEC members .
23 Gemma 's got a long way to go before she gets to eighty
24 Wintec and Thorowgood saddles have come a long way since early designs and Thorowgood also make wipe-clean bridles that look smart enough for most occasions .
25 The Community has gone a long way towards achieving that central purpose ; towards taming nationalism without suppressing patriotism ; towards sharing sovereignty without destroying nations ; and towards putting the magic of markets to work for society in a stable democratic setting .
26 But the industrial robot has come a long way since the early sixties when Joe Engelberger set up Unimation , the world 's first industrial robot making company .
27 An inventor has developed a high-flying way of scaring birds away from growing crops .
28 Air refuelling has come a long way from the first attempts in the thirties where the co-pilot literally popped out and grabbed the hose .
29 CRISIS has become an uncomfortable way of life for the National Health Service … racked by a row which is dominating all the others . ’
30 Mrs Davidson , of Stirling , said that so many people had contacted them that the association 's annual meeting had decided the only way to raise its profile and make a difference for patients was to set up a body covering Scotland as a whole .
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