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

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1 This trend will be most prevalent among larger companies that find downsizing takes a long time due to the complexity of their computing environment .
2 This trend will be most prevelant among larger companies that find downsizing takes a long time due to the complexity of their computing environment .
3 It seemed to Lefevre that the splash took a long time in coming .
4 If the WC cistern takes a long time to fill , it is possible that a high-pressure type of ballvalve has been fitted instead of a low-pressure type ( page 38 ) or that there is dirt in the valve orifice .
5 Although the academic study of Roman law took a long time to have practical effect , by the 1170s and 1180s it was occasionally cited authoritatively in some at least of the courts of the south .
6 His philosophy took a long time to be appreciated , partly because he never pushed his own work , which was subsequently overshadowed by that of Wittgenstein .
7 Also the carbs on the SD1 V8 engine take a long time to return to idle when you take your foot off the throttle .
8 The difference is that your body takes a long time to react to the tetanus antitoxin Sorry , to the tetanus vaccine , to make antibodies against it .
9 The legal process takes a long time and the task of getting new Regulations approved remained incomplete when I retired .
10 However , if that application process takes a long time , it is felt that one can not upset that person 's lifestyle — he may be married — and he is allowed to stay .
11 Cardiff was , of course , built on mud flats , and nature takes a long time to change .
12 He was a perfectionist , and the job took a long time .
13 The stitching takes a long time and hurts Stig a lot more than it hurts the rest of us .
14 Yes but you know I mean a tr a tree takes a long time to mature does n't it ?
15 Christine de Pizan was born in 1365 and wrote The Book of the City of Ladies in 1405 ; the battle for women 's right to equal education took a long time to win .
16 The chemicals are water-borne and the timber takes a long time to dry out .
17 These services are still delivered through the traditional hierarchical structures with decisions being ‘ handed down ’ and information from the ground level taking a long time to reach and influence the making of decisions and policy .
18 All fairly straightforward though the coded letter we recovered from his baggage took a long time to crack , while his shaving kit will never be the same again after each piece was stripped to its component parts by one participant .
19 The Geometricks styler took a long time to heat up .
20 But ‘ catch-up ’ in science takes a long time , and the legacy of that Stalinist assault persists in the USSR 's current backwardness in genetic engineering ; it is probably also reflected in the poor agricultural productivity of the country .
21 And the City took a long time to wake up to Europe 's moves towards monetary union ; its bid to host a European central bank was made later than most others .
22 The gizzard-stone treatment meant that food took a long time to digest .
23 The College in Coleman 's reign took a long time to recover from the difficulties of its early days .
24 The sinews of political and economic integration required to enable the expanded raising of resources by the Crown took a long time to create .
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