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

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1 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 .
2 The convent has a long tradition of illustrating cards and books with delicate hand-crafted watercolours and inscriptions .
3 Literature has a long history of feminist interest , but film and media studies are certainly as central to feminist cultural debates .
4 Talk of a realignment on the centre-left of the spectrum has a long history .
5 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 .
6 ‘ The horse has a long neck , and that helped me get back in the saddle , ’ he added .
7 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 .
8 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 .
9 The Social Work Department has a long tradition of working in collaboration with other service providers .
10 The technique of biomass gasification by partial combustion has a long history .
11 This kind of research has a long history in psychology and education but is relatively undeveloped in the rest of social science .
12 Local government audit has a long history .
13 The village has a long history .
14 Like copyright , patent law has a long history and has developed as a means of protecting innovation which has a benefit to innovator and public alike .
15 THE QUEEN 'S HEAD , said to be a 14th Century inn has a long gallery , now glassed in , facing east , but it is not an original structure .
16 Western philosophy has a long tradition so it is not surprising that it has changed over the centuries both in content and in method .
17 The difference from RP can be appreciated quite easily by reference to the pair can , ca n't : can has the long back vowel predicted by the single nasal environment , whereas can ‘ t has the short front vowel predicted by the nasal + voiceless obstruent environment ( compare also dance , ranch , etc. , which are short , front ) .
18 A long-stroke engine has a long con-rod , which acts as a longer lever on the crank .
19 If we then look at paragraph five , that 's the first page of appendix two , we see here The appeal site has a long planning history .
20 The UK group has a long standing commitment , made to the Hong Kong Government , to broaden the shareholder base of Hong Kong Telecom and a deal with CITIC would be consistent with that .
21 Large and secretive , this wrasse has a long body of up to 45 centimetres .
22 Anti-parliamentarianism has a long history in France .
23 ‘ But I rather think my modest , high-minded , fastidious , idealistic wife has a long way to go before she qualifies for that description . ’
24 The CAB has a long history of mobilising professionals such as lawyers , accountants and surveyors , to advise clients on a voluntary basis but there are very few lawyers who specialise in welfare benefits or money advice .
25 The assertion that law is unsuitable or unable to deal with family and personal behaviour has a long history .
26 If properly fitted to the shaft the boot has a long life .
27 The result is that shops use a work-in-process inventory to buffer themselves against problems and uncertainties , a situation where each station has a long queue of semifinished elements .
28 The position with the County Council is that while has no long term debt , it has never satisfied the tests of central government , for the capital control regime .
29 As outlined earlier , low temperatures past and present are also indicated by the evidence that the Moon has a long history of outer rigidity .
30 The Oxenhope Straw Race has a long way to go before it reaches its centenary , but the aims of the people who organise it and take part are the same as those who in the nineteenth century began the hospital sings at Holmfirth and Mapplewell .
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