Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [art] long way " in BNC.

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1 They would have to come home the long way round .
2 The manner of Biggs 's defeat was to say the least surprising and on this evidence Mason has still a long way to go before he can think of himself as a genuine contender for the world championship .
3 Then Davey moved quite a long way away for his work and she hardly saw him .
4 Nomes can fall quite a long way without being hurt , and in any case a bacon , lettuce and tomato sandwich broke his fall .
5 THE SHAMEN have come quite a long way from their origins as an indie psychedelic outfit .
6 THE SHAMEN have come quite a long way from their origins as an indie psychedelic outfit .
7 ‘ I do seem to have come quite a long way . ’
8 And people have actually moved quite a long way in the direction of actually working out their own finances .
9 However , if you are correcting for drift with one wing well down , and then the cable breaks , you may find that you have already turned quite a long way , and that it is easier to keep that turn going if you can not get down ahead .
10 What the authorities failed to realise was that in the few years since the war had ended , aircraft design had moved forward a long way , and there had been a rapid development of jet aircraft of which Tank had little or no real experience — he had not been involved in this critical new phase .
11 Oh aye , I said to John I said well I say well how far we 're going cos I 'm not keen on going right a long way
12 And she began to walk home the long way round so as not to bump into anybody .
13 If I 'm depressed at all it is that I think that you could make this process slightly less obtrusive and violent and spark-generating if there was more systematic analysis and discussion beforehand , going back a long way .
14 They 've discovered we 're the oldest family in the whole county , going back a long way !
15 and the problem of access to the flats , and sometimes the necessity to walk quite a long way before you can get out onto the street , which would be a problem for young mothers with , with , with small children , as equally it would be a problem for elderly people or disabled people .
16 This tradition itself can be traced back a long way in political theory .
17 Iron working in the area goes back a long way .
18 She paused , then added , ‘ It goes back a long way . ’
19 Mankind 's love affair with the apple goes back a long way .
20 The literature on the professions goes back a long way , but seems to have reached a peak in the 1960s and 1970s ( see , for example , Etzioni 1969 ; Jackson 1970 ) , perhaps because the professions were at an apogee of esteem at that point , before the attacks of Illich ( 1977 ) and others who , like Shaw many years before , accused them of establishing a ‘ radical monopoly ’ in the name of meeting people 's ‘ needs ’ .
21 For BP , involvement in the region goes back a long way .
22 ‘ That — that our relationship goes back a long way , of course . ’
23 The saying , one law for them and another for us , goes back a long way .
24 This is a view which goes back a long way , at least as far as the time of the Radcliffe Report in 1960 .
25 ‘ His family goes back a long way . ’
26 However , social historians say couples having non-penetrative sex goes back a long way .
27 Goes back a long way I 'm afraid .
28 so she goes back a long way .
29 Everyone knows that , it goes back a long way .
30 Although different presentation styles are appropriate to different media this is not indicated on the list and you will need to refer either to the Quick Reference Guide ( a single folder card that you should try to keep handy ) or to Chapter 20 of the User Guide — which frankly seems rather a long way in !
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