Example sentences of "[vb pp] [verb] [prep] [art] long " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He was ‘ permitted to put in a long day 's work for his Master , and it can be truly said that he gave his best ’ .
2 This spring , however , there really are a few green shoots of recovery , and in a more confident climate , where people are once again prepared to plan for the long term , they could blossom rapidly .
3 She was much happier person because this this she 'd threatened to do for a long time .
4 Marx also took from the classical economists the idea that rates of profit are bound to fall in the long term .
5 He had become inured to the long , solitary vigils in hotel rooms awaiting the return telephone calls ; learnt the art of never leaving one 's name and telephone number more than once , because ‘ it makes you look desperate ’ .
6 The sound had seemed to come from a long way over the heath to the right .
7 ‘ She 's wanted to go for a long time , ’ said Anne , nodding .
8 And went on , ‘ When my mother died , ten years ago , my father did what he 'd wanted to do for a long time and moved into here , leaving me the palazzo . ’
9 ‘ It 's what I 've wanted to do for a long time , so long that I ca n't remember a time when the name Tony Radcliffe did n't send me into a violent rage ! ’
10 ‘ Sheisse , ’ he added explosively as if he had at last allowed himself to be convinced of something which he had wanted to believe for a long time .
11 The meandering reminiscence of boarding-school rituals is like being forced to listen to a long , pointless story about an acquaintance 's childhood .
12 The hurdle of post office reform has brought down French ministers of state before now , notably Pierre Lelong , who held the posts and telecommunications portfolio in Jacques Chirac 's government but was forced to resign after a long and bitter strike in 1974 .
13 Several transplants have been tried before , but this is the first time they have continued to function for a long period , according to the researchers at the University of Alberta , in Edmonton .
14 I 'll see that bugger tomorrow mornin' if I have to get up at five , an , I 'll tell him what I 've meant to do for a long time ; I 'll take the can along to the authorities .
15 She would have liked to go for a long walk past the charming wedding-cake buildings that lined the promenade , but although it was only teatime , it was already too dark to see anything .
16 She had begun to pull on the long suede gloves which she had earlier stripped from her beautiful hands .
  Next page