Example sentences of "[conj] [art] [noun sg] [verb] a long " in BNC.

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1 As outlined earlier , low temperatures past and present are also indicated by the evidence that the Moon has a long history of outer rigidity .
2 Within the family itself , each member contributes as part of the system , being in some way a member from birth through to death , so that the system has a long history .
3 I have always maintained , ’ Woolley said with ponderous irony , ‘ that the way to avoid a long argument is to shoot the other man before he starts .
4 It is not surprising , then , to find that the clause has a long career in the documents .
5 It seemed to Lefevre that the splash took a long time in coming .
6 Proponents claim that the plant goes a long way toward addressing the heavily oil dependent state 's energy needs , and , would entail the destruction of at most 2 percent of the Wao Kele tract .
7 If the individual has a long position , his actual rate of return over the one-year holding period ( rh ) ( assuming T= I ) is .
8 If the chemical diffuses a long way it is more like shouting and a larger number of cells could receive the signal .
9 All money purchase schemes are potentially unpredictable , and are especially likely to lose value through monetary inflation ( and not least if the annuitant lives a long time ) unless the annuity is fully index-linked , which is not the case under present legislation .
10 Soon the traffic began to thin and the road became a long straight fenland route with occasional trees and sporadic bungalows slipping into the dykes .
11 The Duke held his branch still higher , waving it slowly from side to side , and the piper started a long , echoing note on his drone .
12 He was a perfectionist , and the job took a long time .
13 And the City took a long time to wake up to Europe 's moves towards monetary union ; its bid to host a European central bank was made later than most others .
14 The chemicals are water-borne and the timber takes a long time to dry out .
15 In many ways the part of a horseman 's job calling for most of his skill was that concerned with working the land , and using a standard of craftsmanship set immeasurably high both by the tradition of his craft and by the immediate needs of cultivation ; and a horseman served a long and disciplined apprenticeship before he could attain to the standard demanded .
16 The countryman takes a great interest in the weather : he has to because his living is bound up with it ; and he observes it as closely as a scientist watching a long and intricate experiment .
17 It will also show this combination when a person reads a single sentence and when a person reads a long passage of prose .
18 I I ca n't comment on on comments that you are referencing , however I will say that in Maryland er we displaced an incumbent vendor who had been there a long time , er that vendor was a bit upset as you might imagine with being displaced as a vendor , and in Maryland we had a situation that kind of evolved into the same kind of political row you would expect when a company loses a long time business .
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