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

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1 Please forgive the long gap in these ‘ Notes ’ .
2 What is more , much of government expenditure is committed a long time in advance and can not easily be cut .
3 Simulators have come a long way in recent years and today many of them use screen addressing to update the information .
4 Tank decor has come a long way in recent years from the garish backdrop , and the odd lump of rock with a few dying plants .
5 It has come a long way in the last decade .
6 You 've come a long way in a short time . ’
7 That newspapers had come a long way in the interim period was beyond doubt ; that they were to travel even further was to be confirmed by the manner in which the Cadburys disposed of the News Chronicle in 1960 .
8 Imaging technology has come a long way in the last few years and there are currently available several Imaging systems which in theory could integrate with Council Tax software .
9 We have come a long way in this preliminary discussion without saying anything about what actually counts as data in the social sciences .
10 Douglas McIldoon , of the EC , said : ‘ This document demonstrates that you have come a long way in this region and it will give us great pleasure in working with you to make it happen . ’
11 DANDELIONS have come a long way in Darlington .
12 Either way he has come a long way in a very short time , especially for someone who left journalism for PR at the age of 22 after failing to break into daily newspapers .
13 CAMBRIDGE University 's Boat Race trials were derailed yesterday when one of the three crews hit a floating sleeper on the Thames at Putney , tearing a long gash in the hull .
14 Although this technique has a long ancestry in the Old World it was unknown in the Americas until the Spanish conquest in the sixteenth century .
15 Additionally , the needle has a long groove in its front face .
16 And she said er Angela said to her oh poor Neil has to stays in bed until one o'clock every Saturday and then on Sunday he has a he gets up late and then he has a long rest in the afternoon and Pam said to me he 's copping out .
17 This central role for private property has a long history in European thought and goes back to the eighteenth-century notion of the social contract .
18 Idealism has a long history in philosophy , going back at least to the Irish philosopher Berkeley , and it is sometimes attributed , as it was by Marx , to Plato .
19 What 's more it 's one that , contrary to composites ' up-to-the-minute image , has a long history in the specialist motor industry .
20 VOLUNTARY service has a long history in America .
21 In this second talk I want to mention a view which has a long history in the Church , far longer than my previous subject .
22 Gaselee , 53 , has a long history in racing in several capacities .
23 Anti-parliamentarianism has a long history in France .
24 The concept of social disorganization , for example , which has a long history in sociology , assumes its contrast to be with a ‘ community ’ , a harmoniously well-organized and integrated society .
25 Thirty-seven per cent of the national dairy herd is of the Swedish Friesian ( SLB ) , which has a long history in the country .
26 The practice of coppicing has a long history in Britain .
27 The use of an outsider to observe what happens in a school has a long history in Britain through the process of formal school inspection .
28 This was known as the ‘ butty system ’ , which has a long history in the area ( Griffin , 1977 , p. 26 ) .
29 The study of the state has a long history in the social sciences .
30 Most importantly the use of syntactic information has a long history in computational linguistics .
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