Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [adv] [prep] [art] long " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The tackle from behind has been stopped here for a long time , but they were doing it all night and getting away with it .
2 The increase had been won only after a long struggle .
3 He knew this was something that had been happening slowly for a long time , something that had to happen or he was lost , but it was such a brittle structure they were building , one word would topple it , shatter it , one word would be enough to jerk them back into that ordinary daylight where nothing could be changed or righted , nothing could unravel .
4 All the animals are in their cages , but they do n't seem to have very much space , and some of them have n't been fed properly for a long time .
5 Only the day before , those noble , horned beasts had been filing unsuspectingly through the long grass of the plain , intending to wallow harmlessly in some cool place through the heat of the day .
6 Social anthropologists can and do study members of their own society and they have been doing so for a long time , though mostly they do not do it very well .
7 Thus there was a confusing number of elements on earth , above it and below it which contributed to the afterlife , representing ideas which had been brought together over a long period of time .
8 arguments , all of which can be developed only by a long mental soak in the subject .
9 In particular , it has a lower jaw so loosely connected with the upper that it can be pushed forward like a long narrow spoon .
10 Anyone who is stupid enough to try and derail a train should be locked away for a long time .
11 The good effects of war can be detected only in the long term , and there were bad effects too , while the consequences of coalition for the party were immediate and almost wholly negative .
12 In the case of the Hundred Years War , the causes of the conflict were to be found both in the long historic links between England and France , links which were gradually becoming weaker , and in the need to express in new terms the relationship between the two countries ( arguably the two most powerful in western society in the late Middle Ages ) taking into account elements such as national consciousness and diverging methods of government ( to name but two ) which historians recognise as being characteristic of late medieval European society as a whole .
13 Kraemer and Roberts ( 1984 ) offer as justification for this assumption the suggestion that ‘ important ’ memories retain the ability to be retrieved even after a long retention interval whereas less important memories do not .
14 Nick Brown was cleared of drugs charges in Goa , but has only just been allowed home after a long campaign by his mother .
15 I heard this with embarrassment , remembering how terribly bored and miserable I had been sitting there on a long hot afternoon , hardly understanding a word as chiefs and elders talked to our delegation in local dialect .
16 It seemed as if her silence at last unnerved her father because he turned to speak to her just before they were to walk together down the long aisle .
17 He and his son were coming home from a long day 's fishing .
18 A rectangular coil is located parallel to a long straight current-carrying wire as shown in Fig. 4.19 .
19 Next door , steady work is going ahead on a long term , very ambitious educational project to which he is now turning his energies .
20 The final decision as to what to count is actually the solution to the problem in hand ; this decision is taken only through a long series of complicated exploratory maneuvers ’ ( Labov 1972a : 82 ) .
21 They had been imprisoned there by a long dead ruler , Llud .
22 Mr Nyers was speaking shortly after a long procedural wrangle on the method of electing the new leadership .
23 The flare had drifted slowly down behind the church on the village green and was followed quickly by a long burst of automatic fire .
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