Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [adv] long time " in BNC.
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1 | And this pays in the results you get only after a very long time . |
2 | If such businesses are independent and directly answerable to the stock market , any bad investment decisions would only become apparent after a very long time . |
3 | But decline does not mean " cessation " , immediately or even after a very long time ; although erection will occur gradually less often , ejaculation will take longer to achieve with the passing years and the frequency of sexual intercourse tends slowly to decrease , there need not be any enormous difference sexually between a man of 20 and one of 70 . |
4 | Solid drinking ‘ Two years ago I had a one-day relapse after a very long time of being sober . |
5 | The effects of oil pollution on marine mammals are more severe in colder waters , not only because of the much longer time required for the oil to break down , but also because concentrations of cetaceans and other marine mammals are often larger in polar waters . |
6 | It seemed like a very long time ago when I and others followed Lovat into this house . |
7 | ‘ It might seem like an awful long time to be working on a debut album , but we 're were n't going to be rushed , ’ says Dermot . |
8 | Julius stared at her for what seemed like an extraordinarily long time . |
9 | Despite episcopal censures , the practice continued for a surprisingly long time ; measures were taken to stop Irish clergy so cohabiting as late as the sixth century . |
10 | It has become the drug of choice for the American armed forces and for the World Health Organization , and has survived against the threat of resistant strains for a surprisingly long time . |
11 | Basically , however , British cities ‘ got by ’ for a surprisingly long time . |
12 | By sending permanent representatives to the courts of Europe the Ottomans would have been accepting a kind of regular and established contact with the west which denied their most deeply held assumptions , which implied an at least partial renunciation of the inherent superiority to the Christian world which they claimed , and which for a surprisingly long time , even after the balance of military strength had turned decisively against them , seemed to almost all of them unnecessary and to promise no real advantage . |
13 | Mr Deukmejian , who was elected governor in 1982 , has been trying for a mighty long time to get the death penalty enforced in California . |
14 | But he 'll have a sore head for a pretty long time , I should imagine . ’ |
15 | Some have been living for a disconcertingly long time in museums ; but once doubted , the evidence of inadequacy in a fake is quite often soon in coming . |
16 | This effect persists for a relatively long time , and as there is a specific relationship between the stimuli and the responses , it is regarded as a genuine form of associative learning . |
17 | T n tracts of T 9 GCA 9 persist for a relatively long time adds further weight to the suggestion that these are caused by ligand-induced alterations in local DNA structure , rendering it more susceptible to attack by this nuclease . |
18 | Therefore , before a conclusion is reached , tests must be continued for a sufficiently long time to demonstrate an adequate shelf-life in the market concerned . |
19 | In other words , they have been allowed to grow and multiply for a sufficiently long time to produce large numbers of cells . |
20 | All you need to do is to be sufficiently obstructive for a sufficiently long time and and his mates will turn around and throw up their hands and shak and and turn somersaults . |
21 | People who have intelligence and a conscience wrestle with these problems and we 've come to a conclusion which is as good a deal as we think we can get , with the people of the area and with the Labour party and I think he said that if people in this authority are sufficiently obstructive for a sufficiently long time then people will change their minds . |
22 | The 'phone rang for a very long time and when Mrs Pettifer eventually answered she sounded quite put out . |
23 | ‘ As far as the grassroots are concerned we have got one , and I hope we have her for a very long time . ’ |
24 | It has been a shareholder for a very long time in some private companies and I think we 've become known to be a supportive shareholder . |
25 | For example , the Eskimos , who as hunters and fishermen are right at the bottom of Marx 's and Engels 's technological scale , have a kinship terminology which does not classify relatives any more than the English system does — a sign for Morgan of the presence of monogamy — while the Malays , who have possessed for a very long time highly advanced agricultural techniques , use a kinship terminology which Morgan and Engels associated with the earliest stages of evolution . |
26 | It was something he had not felt for a very long time . |
27 | It is important to have been about for a very long time . |
28 | Owen O'Neil agrees : ‘ There 's no major comedy circuit in Northern Ireland in the way there is in London , but people have survived for a very long time on the strength of their own sense of humour . ’ |
29 | Unkindly , I laughed and told him that that sounded just about the worst idea I had heard for a very long time . |
30 | ‘ We 've worked together for a very long time . ’ |