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

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1 He hated the vulgarity of showing off the delegates as though they were exhibits , and the insincerity of pretending that platitudes were pronouncements of world-shaking import , and the feeling that he came a long way to greet fellow-Christians and found himself turned into a ham-actor on a second-rate stage .
2 My grandfather , who was one of the aircraft pioneers , told me that he had a long argument with Cody about whether a certain member was in tension or in compression in flight .
3 She does n't know any of their names , but she remembers that he had a long scar running right up his hand .
4 That he had the long record of offenses , mainly dishonesty and some for violence against the police .
5 We hoped that the US medical team whom we supposed would attend him at Wiesbaden , as we 'd heard had happened with other American hostages , would recognize that he needed a long rest .
6 Man is unique among the apes in that he grows a long beard , and it is to this that he owes his superior intelligence
7 He was up for a western , and he had the long hair , but after school he went to a barber and had his head shaved .
8 Her nephew , Tim , was Miss Miggs 's only relative , and he lived a long way away up in the North .
9 Tromsø was huddled and silent below and he took a long time over his last look .
10 Sliding her hands round to his flat stomach , she lightly ran her fingers through the hair arrowing down from his navel and he gave a long shudder .
11 His face had grown pale at the harshness of the rebuke and he drew a long breath before replying .
12 if he wears a long sleeve shirt , as soon as he takes his jacket off , he wo n't go around with his shirt
13 But he likes the long school holidays ! ’ said Tony .
14 But he came a long way round from a long way back , and O'Brien , by no means a habitual blamer of jockeys , is still convinced they should have won .
15 He might have added : But he has a long memory for those that let him down .
16 But he has a long way to go to close down Sir Teddy 's 15,000 majority .
17 But he holed the long putt coming back to keep the match alive after Davies had safely made a par .
18 You hear the crowd roar and a new name comes up on the leaderboard and you wonder whether he holed a long putt or chipped in .
19 erm The second half started as the first half finished , with a again a very erm entertaining game erm in the fiftieth minute , on a break , Almondsbury 's Alex Stocker was nearest to scoring for them when he floated a long ball forward which Mark Sibble was very glad to tip over the bar .
20 Five minutes later , United goalkeeper , Ken Vasey was just fought when he missed a long cross from the left , and Bull was there heading into the empty net .
21 The consequence of excommunication for Jacob was economic isolation : he was forced to give up his trade ( also shoemaking ) and was given redress for this when he petitioned the Long Parliament in 1640 .
22 Mortimer almost ran headlong into a patrol of Germans as he traversed a long gallery , but the Germans were hampered by uncocked weapons , and Mortimer downed two of them with his Browning before ducking behind a turn in the wall , his men loosing a volley of rifle fire into the surviving guards .
23 From the back of the room where they were made to stand apart from the family for the rest of the ceremony , the three children were able to hear only snatches of their grandfather 's words as he conducted a long discourse praising the virtues of his dead parent .
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