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

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1 After a particularly long photo-session , the photographer wanted one more shot and her patience gave out : ‘ Hurry up , ’ she said firmly , ‘ I 'm busy . ’ ’
2 When he returned , after a slightly longer period than on the two previous occasions , Elisa had been persuaded to have a second cup of coffee .
3 The extended families are split up as the men move first , to be followed only after a fairly long interval by wives and children and often never by other relatives .
4 Five of the men arrested in the Rathcoole district were released within twenty-one days and two more after a much longer period , but without ‘ allegations ’ having been made to justify their detention .
5 ‘ No , ’ she said at last , after a very long pause .
6 And this pays in the results you get only after a very long time .
7 If such businesses are independent and directly answerable to the stock market , any bad investment decisions would only become apparent after a very long time .
8 But decline does not mean " cessation " , immediately or even after a very long time ; although erection will occur gradually less often , ejaculation will take longer to achieve with the passing years and the frequency of sexual intercourse tends slowly to decrease , there need not be any enormous difference sexually between a man of 20 and one of 70 .
9 Solid drinking ‘ Two years ago I had a one-day relapse after a very long time of being sober .
10 It 's very satisfying after a very long investigation .
11 Tito , at the age of 87 , was forced to stay alive for a few extra weeks by the vigorous application of every last trick of the medical trade , including the use of a kidney machine , long after it was apparent that he had reached the end of a pretty long road .
12 ‘ I shall ask your indulgence of a rather long exposition , Mr Chairman .
13 She had , to hand , the lavatory brush , three toilet rolls and the hardback edition of a very long novel by a Peruvian author with an unpronounceable name .
14 On the whole , they appear as keen at the end of a very long day as at the beginning .
15 This may be the middle of the afternoon to you , to me it 's evening — and the end of a very long day . ’
16 Certain ancient stains along the approach corridor — which resembled the rib cage of a very long whale — had suggested that those ribs could clash shut at any sign of unwelcome visitors , imprisoning or crushing intruders .
17 Only at the end of a very long career did he occasionally depart from the highest standards of restrained good taste .
18 The organ here is a fine instrument , well played by Bernard Gavoty , and this account takes its place at or near the top of a very long list .
19 For either Concerto , this new disc deserves a place close to the top of a very long list .
20 It 's like being a very little fish on the end of a very long line . ’
21 Statements by the West German Bundesbank indicate that it views monetary union as a state which comes only at the end of a very long process of economic convergence .
22 So here we are today , almost at the end of a very long process , having experienced a wide ranging debate about the future of Greater York and numerous consultation exercises .
23 It is the end of a very long era .
24 The capacity rules are just part of a now long list of rules and regulations that surround university life , and make extra demands on the time and freedom of academics .
25 Today those cross bunkers were in range of a really long drive .
26 This must have been a most amazing sight , coming as it did as the climax of a much longer event staged beforehand outside Wanstead House itself .
27 Auden was part of a much longer game : part of a shape which , as yet , existed in his head alone .
28 The return trek can seem like a very long haul but all the effort seems well worthwhile by the time you 're comfortably sitting in the bar at the Sligachan Hotel cradling your glass of single malt .
29 It seemed like a very long time ago when I and others followed Lovat into this house .
30 With brightness masking , subjects report that although the target appeared to be present for a reasonably long period it was too vaguely defined — its contrast was too low for it to be identifiable .
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