Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] have [verb] a long " in BNC.
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1 | One-room living has come a long way from the old bed-sitter image with its general note of poverty and desperation . |
2 | The Iraqi leader 's threatened a long range missile strike on Israel if it does n't leave the occupied territories after yesterday 's violence that left nineteen Palestinians dead . |
3 | This union has got a long history of , this union 's got a long history of amalgamations , some conducted more successfully than others . |
4 | This union has got a long history of , this union 's got a long history of amalgamations , some conducted more successfully than others . |
5 | Yet by the time Gorbachev became General Secretary in 1985 , the historical profession had advanced a long way from the crudities of Stalin 's era . |
6 | Contemporary psychology has come a long way from the time when J. B. Watson , the first behaviourist , forbade the consideration of non-observable entities . |
7 | For Greece , as for Germany and one other country in the NATO alliance , the cold war had shut a long border on the other side of which lay once-familiar territory . |
8 | The humble fryer has come a long way since the days when it was little more than a heating element and a thermostat . |
9 | 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 . |
10 | Himalayan skiing has had a long and painfully slow gestation period beginning with the activities of various Indian Army Officers in the early part of the century . |
11 | American Pentecostalism has travelled a long way from its roots in the southern states . |
12 | Indeed the latest text has gone a long way towards meeting the UK 's objections . ’ |