Example sentences of "[prep] a long [noun] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 For all that , it had the feel of a city wakening up after a long sleep and beginning to shake off decades of despair .
2 I was only about five and a half when she too died after a long illness and one of my earliest recollections is riding in the well , at the foot of her bath-chair when she went out for constitutionals .
3 If you are taken to Harmondsworth after a long journey and several hours of interrogation by Immigration Officers , there is nowhere for you to lie down and rest .
4 Jenna did n't know if he meant that they had finally arrived after a long journey or if he was reliving his youth here , claiming his past again .
5 The air was permeated with Moorlake 's own particular smell , a blend of wood-smoke , of beeswax , of damp , of her aunt 's home-made potpourri in the big bowl on the table , of age , a characteristic scent of which Sara was always aware when she entered the house after a long absence but pane and , idly , Sara tried to open the window .
6 Music played softly in the background as they stood on either side of the hearth , smiling uncertainly at one another like former lovers reunited after a long absence and wondering whether they still had anything in common .
7 They got back together after a long break so he must have liked her as she was .
8 One of the most important points was that , after a long process when every possible avenue had been carefully and scrupulously explored , when Mr. Mendes was returned to Sri Lanka he suffered no persecution whatsoever .
9 Then , after a longer pause than usual , he affirmed : ‘ And that is as far as my thought has reached ’ .
10 If you , yes , certainly , you can use bits , you bits of a long conversation if necessary .
11 A comfortable sleeping bag provides the means to re-charge your batteries at the end of a long day so it 's important to ensure you have the right one for the job .
12 The hypotheses , formed after his observations , are many ; but most of them are related to the empirical findings of a long tradition and the world is spared a too individualistic interpretation of some of Nature 's more self-willed manifestations .
13 It was said that on the first occasion that a female student ‘ scrubbed ’ with him he was reaching the end of a long case and held up the piece of cat-gut slung under the ureter ( to identify it and keep it safe during the dissection ) , saying ‘ Cut ! ’
14 Riskless and pure discount debentures , shares , calls and puts may now be combined as follows : The right-hand side of the above equation , the combination of a long share and a purchased put , is a manufactured purchased call .
15 Viruses have come a heck of a long way since we last took an in-depth look at anti-virus software back in November 1990 .
16 I felt as if I was at the end of a long tunnel where someone was kicking my legs .
17 The cost of a long weekend or midweek mini-break in a two-bedroomed , self-catering villa at Elveden Forest begins at £159 and £138 respectively .
18 It looks therefore as if Russia will have to join the back of a long queue before its turn comes again .
19 Within another two miles we can pick out the inverted ‘ L ’ pattern of one end of a long forest where it touches a B road , adjacent to which point two minor roads feed in at T-junctions ( K , picture taken from south of track — with apologies for the slightly confusing cloud shadow . )
20 It took a hell of a long time but learn we did .
21 But chimpanzees do not breed well in captivity , partly because of a long pregnancy and childhood , and trapping them in the wild is expensive and wasteful enough to put them at risk of extinction .
22 Paddy Ashdown , it appeared , was only the most recent of a long line that stretched back way beyond Sarah Keays and Cecil Parkinson .
23 MUR ON TIG WON The disagreeable experience of listening to oneself in the middle of a long speech and neither understanding what one is saying nor enjoying the manner in which it is being said ; a foreign accent ; a lion breaking wind after the evening repast
24 Two thousand miles to the east of St Petersburg , the boxcar was part of a long train that had started out in St Petersburg a week earlier and had gone along the Trans-Siberian Railway .
25 Some of these might , I am sure , change their opinion as Wheen fills in the gaps and rounds off an account of a long career that began in 1920s aesthetic Oxford and finished in a heart attack in a London taxi almost 50 years later .
26 The line was once part of a longer route that ran to Sheffield , using the Woodhead tunnel under the Pennines .
27 While life expectancy has extended , it appears to have been at the price of a longer period and a greater proportion of life being spent in chronic sickness .
28 In non-ELT materials you can look for situations which are likely to feature highly predictable language : scenes set in restaurants or shops , at parties , the reception desk or the dining table can sometimes be picked out of a longer programme and used in isolation to give an example of particular language functions in operation .
29 Aunt Margaret tucked up Victoria and hung over the cot for a long minute as though she would have liked to sing her a lullaby .
30 James , a £1.3million signing from Watford , looked set for a long run but his mistakes have persuaded Souness to take him out of the spotlight .
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