Example sentences of "[pers pn] had [verb] [prep] [art] long " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 An enormous boxer hurled himself on me in delight , clawing at my chest with the biggest , horniest feet I had seen for a long time .
2 And I realised , well I had realised for a long time that dieting was n't the answer for me .
3 SAFER THAN I HAD FELT FOR A LONG , LONG TIME
4 The night before , I had gone for a long , lonely walk along the banks of the Tormes , crossing and recrossing the Roman bridge , hoping against hope that I might somehow find you also walking there .
5 ‘ Do n't worry , Matey , ’ he said to her , leaving the room of many memories , putting his arms about her , seeing with new eyes how old she had grown , and that he was all she had , the last of the many children for whom she had cared in a long life of selfless service .
6 Arthur Leopold of County Cork had taken the picture , and the first time Ellie had tiptoed into the bedroom she had stood for a long time staring at the photograph , because it was the first time she had ever seen the likeness of her dead mother .
7 After all , she had suspected for a long time now that he was aware of the effect he sometimes had on her .
8 It seemed to Tallis that she had smouldered for a long time before finally the fire had taken hold .
9 She had known for a long time now .
10 She knew she had to travel on a long , stony road , without help or sympathy .
11 They had invested for the long term , if not in imperial unity ( and significantly , nothing was said at Worms about emperorship or empire ) , then in the coexistence of Lothar and Charles in the regnum francorum .
12 They had to go through a long interrogation , and their answers were not found to be satisfactory .
13 There had been a bitter dispute in the college ever since a group of young fellows returning after the war had voted many of the old fellows out of the college offices they had held for a long time .
14 Ahead of them was a little church not unlike the many they had passed on the long route-march from Etaples to the front .
15 Only one Valence had returned , to die slowly of poisons he had absorbed during the long march .
16 He was about to leave the foundry and continue his journey when an apprentice came rushing in with the loveliest girl he had seen in a long while , and his heart seemed to stop .
17 At first he felt more relaxed than he had done for a long time .
18 He had known for a long time , but had refused to admit it to himself .
19 at last the confirmation of something he had known for a long time .
20 Despite the fact that he had come from a long line of soldier forebears , even the combination of breeding , upbringing and training no longer made it easy for him to bear the tedium of army life with good grace .
  Next page