Example sentences of "[noun sg] have [vb pp] [prep] a long " in BNC.

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1 It was a natural response to the advent of nuclear weapons to concentrate on means of limiting or even abolishing them ; and this response has led to a long series of arms control and disarmament negotiations at Geneva and elsewhere .
2 Balcon was the sort of producer the British film industry had needed for a long time .
3 ‘ It 's probably the most important match either team has faced for a long time .
4 The art ( therapy ? ) of Reflexology is founded on the principle that massaging the feet can affect the health of other parts of the body , a fact which acupuncture has known for a long time .
5 SPAIN 'S five years in the European Community have seemed like a long honeymoon .
6 Then he had gone , and the Curator had stared for a long time after him , and then at the golden eagle who stared blankly back at him .
7 Two months after the military crackdown in Beijing in June 1989 , it was announced that university student intake would be cut from 640,000 to 610,000 in the next academic year , and that " specialities mainly in the social science fields which the State has deemed for a long time to have turned out personnel not qualified for socialist construction " would be suspended .
8 The judgements that have to be made are complex , not least because local government has existed for a long time and the opportunities for building up capital or depleting it have been great .
9 This is one of the best new recordings of Honegger 's music to have appeared for a long time .
10 Nobody stops learning , but at only 15st I 'm the fastest heavyweight the world has seen in a long time . ’
11 Some young people in care have voiced for a long time their preference for residential rather than fostering care ( Page and Clark , 1977 ) .
12 The parlour had come on a long way since I was a boy .
13 The document has reappeared after a long sleep in California , and is estimated at £150,000 .
14 Any object that an individual has had for a long time , a favourite book for example , has already been affected by that individual 's electrical impulses .
15 But what I am saying in context , no this has a deal to do with the co boundaries , as you know erm the honourable member well knows , the essence of this this is wholly inappropriate in terms of erm trying to latest citizenship through an arrangement of six additional boundaries into a erm union and a political state and I think that that is the profound objection that this side of the house has expressed over a long period of time now , is a reflection of the public mood in the country in respect of this election and the way the boundaries er are are erm apportioned and all I say in conclusion is that this is an evidence further of the irrelevance of this house in reflecting and attesting to public opinion outside .
16 Maidstone Prison has embarked on a long and costly process to bring integral sanitation to cells , to avoid the ‘ slopping out ’ process and the need to have chamber pots in cells .
17 Figure 18.4 shows , by means of five-year moving averages of deaths per million in England and Wales , how the disease has behaved over a long period in relation to other serious illnesses .
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