Example sentences of "and [adj] [noun] [verb] [art] long " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There is a clear value in reducing the amount of chemical waste which has to be got rid of — and that thinking has a long way to go .
2 Such associations of sexual deviance and political threat have a long history sedimented into our language and culture .
3 More generally the idea of the inseparability of cultural and political revolution has a long history within the libertarian tradition with its roots in revolutionary Romanticism .
4 A team of 123 competitors and 22 officials made the long trip after much media criticism of the small size of the original allocation of places , particularly for athletics .
5 The assertion that law is unsuitable or unable to deal with family and personal behaviour has a long history .
6 Plantations outyield by almost 10 times managed ‘ natural ’ forest and these pines have a long fibre suitable for pulp , but hardwoods , notably Eucalyptus spp. yield higher total amounts of dry matter , and the most productive may yield up to twice that of the best pines .
7 Humankind and human structures seemed a long way away .
8 The work of the pre-electric era was the work of preservation : drying and smoking meat , making cheese and hard bread to survive a long winter huddled in a chalet above the animals .
9 It is in fact the commercially provided infrastructure that is most lacking , and many people live a long way from a shop , although this is to some extent made up for by mobile shops .
10 The street was empty and silent and small sounds carried a long way .
11 To build up an impression of how metal use developed , many and various artefacts covering a long time span need to be examined .
12 Add this to the illness of Hun Sen , the only member of the Cambodian regime who appears willing to risk his future to give peace a chance , and Cambodian peace looks a long way off .
13 At the Rutland Forest Eyre in 1269 the verderers , regarders and other jurors presented a long list of indictments of this kind .
14 The concessions Edward made on matters such as purveyance and unparliamentary taxation went a long way towards meeting the grievances of the commons , and the king was able to mobilize the resources he required for war .
15 For an instant , too , a detached sense of pity welled up inside him at the body 's seeming frailty in the face of its task ; could the slight , sloping shoulders carry the heavy burdens of leadership , the thin arms and bony wrists hold a long steady course ?
  Next page