Example sentences of "[verb] on a long " in BNC.
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1 | She felt his chest rise and fall on a long , slightly unsteady intake of breath . |
2 | The wool was wound on a long stick called a distaff . |
3 | The other half wants to hang dependent clauses ; like ‘ Americans will tell anything to an Englishman with a camera poking over his right shoulder when they are trapped on a long distance train . ’ |
4 | Such accommodation can often be let on a long lease or sold to raise a capital sum . |
5 | The parlour had come on a long way since I was a boy . |
6 | He looked at her and said , adopting roguishness , ‘ Would you like to come on a long journey with me ? |
7 | We 've moved on a long way from the original version . ’ |
8 | Or the link between inflation and unemployment may simply have been operating on a long lag , with the old , high NAIRU returning after several years to smack ministers in the face . |
9 | There is a lot of space , which is needed on a long tour ! |
10 | If you 're going on a long journey alone , plan your route in advance using main roads as far as possible . |
11 | I 'm sure your husband appreciated from afar the care and ‘ antics ’ of you and your friends , the personal and loving touch that one would give to any loved one going on a long journey . ’ |
12 | ‘ It 's been going on a long time , Elaine . |
13 | As you know , the two of them have become good friends , and are going on a long holiday together . |
14 | because it 's been going on a long time . |
15 | But it was I mean you have to admit erm and I 'm I 'll bring Mr Power in and let him speak for himself , but you have to admit that it from what we 've just heard , it started in nineteen seventy four , it 's been going on a long time . |
16 | The film opened on a long lingering shot of sponsors ' lorries . |
17 | The words arrived on a long feather of smoke . |
18 | Under these schemes , which had first been developed in the 1970s as a means of raising capital from the private sector for new development , for example , on office and shopping complexes ( i.e. as a means of avoiding constraints on capital spending ) , council property was sold on a long lease to another agency and then leased back for shorter periods until the long lease expired . |
19 | You 're heartlessly manipulating your mother into believing that we 're about to embark on a long and happy marriage , and you 're doing it by manipulating me . |
20 | 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 . |
21 | It has been bought on a long lease which also gives BP , which uses the offices , a five-year lease-back arrangement . |
22 | They are borne on a long , stout , fleshy leaf-stalk . |
23 | This species has a finely toothed margin ; a large , wide leaf born on a long stem . |
24 | Such dramatic examples of commercial self-interest were not in reality offset by the more representative efforts of companies such as Unilever , Mitchell Cotts and Booker McConnell in English-speaking Africa , or CFAO in French-speaking Africa who had invested on a long term basis for relatively modest returns . |
25 | The film is based on a long novel by Pat Conroy which deals with the excavation of the past , a current favourite theme . |
26 | It was not that what he said was startlingly new , for it was based on a long tradition , but his particular talent and novelty was that he managed to combine biblical exegesis with growing papal ideology , to induce the texts to mean something of relevance to his leadership of society . |
27 | This chapter concentrates on these three national clearinghouses already established , and is based on a longer paper on the subject . |
28 | He then embarked on a long tirade about the tactics we should adopt for a forthcoming game with an Army side . |
29 | He was getting nearer to himself , travelling on a long loop of bumpy path through the trees . |
30 | ‘ But I 'm so glad to be home , ’ Faye confessed on a long sigh . |