Example sentences of "[noun prp] have [vb pp] [art] long [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Clough has waited a long time for a decent run to establish himself after more than two years as squad makeweight . |
2 | Afghanistan has had a long history of neutrality and non-alignment which Soviet leaders have assiduously fostered . |
3 | Ayrshire has had a long association with the aeroplane , mainly centred on Prestwick Airport and the companies which have built aircraft on the site . |
4 | During this time Alcock had begun the long process of memorising the night sky ; by 1932 he already knew the position of most stars that can be seen by the naked eye . |
5 | There were no regulations to prevent people from walking up the Balmoral side of the mountain when the Queen was not staying at the castle , and Richard had chosen a long ascent from the Balmoral side for the sake of privacy . |
6 | ‘ Chopper an' Frankie 's got a long walk 'ome , ’ Tony said . |
7 | Cuba has gone a long way to reducing gender inequalities , though power relations still clearly favour men , a fact of which all Cubans , including their leaders , are very aware . |
8 | Joyce Barker has had a long association with Trinity Mill and recalls that the gearing was so light and precise that , even as a child of five , she could easily control the milling process and the sack hoist ! |
9 | The loss of Davies to Widnes last January has cast a long shadow over British rugby . |
10 | The CNAA had come a long way since 1964 : ‘ from being a shy bureaucracy it has become an important and an innovatory force in higher education ’ . |
11 | Washington had come a long way from the converted house of 1835 , the charmingly simple Italianate villa of 1851 , or even the pleasingly revivalist Baltimore and Potomac of 1873–7 . |
12 | Jones and Brewer have had a long series of injuries , but both are near enough to fitness and form . |
13 | Gemma 's got a long way to go before she gets to eighty |
14 | Teclis was stronger now , the potions of the Loremasters had gone a long way towards giving him mortal strength . |
15 | Phil 's got a long way to go actually |
16 | Kapil has advanced a long way since he burst onto the international scene in the late 1970s . |
17 | Geldof has come a long way since his first single with the Boomtown Rats , a hymn to selfishness called Looking After Number One . |
18 | Anna has come a long way from the Romanian orphanage where she spent the first two years of her life , a malnourished , incontinent infant with a shaven head . |
19 | Northwich-Winsford in mid-Cheshire has had a long record of stable employment provided by companies like ICI and Foden . |
20 | Miss Lodsworth had had a long day . |
21 | It was St Patrick 's Night , 1912 , and Sergeant O'Neil had had a long day , what with the parade and all . |
22 | Multiple champions Honda have quit the long distance haul and Alex Vieira ( on the RVF ) now rides for Kawasaki |
23 | If we wish to measure the past in terms of life-expectancy , poverty , ignorance , disease , education , comfort and leisure , then there is no doubt that the modern world in the West has come a long way . |
24 | ‘ Eric has come a long way since then , ’ said McAllister . |
25 | The fear was there again , from last summer , when Peter had climbed the long ladder up to the clock tower and had frozen near the top ; Barnes had had to talk him down . |
26 | Western Europe had come a long way since 1945 . |
27 | This is a bit odd cos Banbury 's got a long way to travel |
28 | MacMillan has come a long way since 1963 but Hermanas can still grip when done as well as this . |
29 | Marjorie had opened the long sash windows and pushed the table near them , so that it was almost like eating in the garden . |
30 | Darlington had waited a long time for a shopping centre , she said , but the wait had its advantages . |