Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb -s] [art] long [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | This decision goes a long way towards demonstrating the untenability of the marital-rape exemption in modern times . |
2 | WHATEVER YOU 'RE PLANNING TO BUY YOUR MONEY GOES A LONG WAY WITH ABBEY NATIONAL |
3 | Bourdieu goes a long way to remedying this defect in his treatment of actual practices in his structure ( fields ) . |
4 | 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 . |
5 | The basic rule is that if the second syllable of the verb contains a long vowel or diphthong , or if it ends with more than one consonant , that second syllable is stressed . |
6 | The dose equivalence over 24 hours is more difficult to estimate but since salmeterol has a longer duration of action salmeterol 50 µg twice daily may be equivalent to salbutamol 500 µg four to six hourly . |
7 | The convent has a long tradition of illustrating cards and books with delicate hand-crafted watercolours and inscriptions . |
8 | If the final syllable of the stem contains a long vowel or diphthong , or if it ends with more than one consonant , that syllable receives the stress . |
9 | Literature has a long history of feminist interest , but film and media studies are certainly as central to feminist cultural debates . |
10 | Talk of a realignment on the centre-left of the spectrum has a long history . |
11 | A little amiability goes a long way , it would seem , and many of those present felt that Reebok was the unluckiest loser of the night in this category . |
12 | The interpretation of ‘ mind ’ as information processing with a self-monitoring facility called consciousness goes a long way towards resolving the problem of body — mind interaction which Popper and Eccles ( 1978 ) have recently revived . |
13 | There seems to be a lot of blood , but , you know , a little blood goes a long way . |
14 | The Association has a long history ( dating back to the end of the last century ) , and the ESRC funded project will complement existing work on the period before 1946 . |
15 | ‘ The horse has a long neck , and that helped me get back in the saddle , ’ he added . |
16 | Labour has a long list of priorities : a £3 billion pledge on pensions — presumably health comes after that ; health presumably comes after Labour 's £1 billion recovery programme and it presumably comes after Labour 's £8 billion housing pledge . |
17 | There is a clear value in reducing the amount of chemical waste which has to be got rid of — and that thinking has a long way to go . |
18 | The Social Work Department has a long tradition of working in collaboration with other service providers . |
19 | The technique of biomass gasification by partial combustion has a long history . |
20 | SWELTERWEIGHT Fender Champ 25SE Fender 's new Champ 25SE has the longest reach , boasts the biggest biceps and packs the heftiest punch of any previous incarnation of the model . |
21 | Visible light has a longer wavelength than UV radiation . |
22 | Nothing about " what it is like " to see blue or red tells us which light has the longer wavelength . |
23 | Red light has the longest wavelength and violet the shortest , with orange , yellow , green and blue in between . |
24 | This kind of research has a long history in psychology and education but is relatively undeveloped in the rest of social science . |
25 | The tobacco industry plans a long time ahead . |
26 | Our study shows the long term spontaneous resolution of severe glue ear in children . |
27 | Holbein sounds a long way away from Braque but I think it 's a question of visual patterns , the division of the area . |
28 | This trend will be most prevalent among larger companies that find downsizing takes a long time due to the complexity of their computing environment . |
29 | This trend will be most prevelant among larger companies that find downsizing takes a long time due to the complexity of their computing environment . |
30 | If the chemical diffuses a long way it is more like shouting and a larger number of cells could receive the signal . |