Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv] [prep] a long " in BNC.
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1 | arguments , all of which can be developed only by a long mental soak in the subject . |
2 | The increase had been won only after a long struggle . |
3 | Now , as she crossed into Farringdon Street and saw familiar landmarks , she stopped and put down her bag , gazing about her with the pleasure of someone who has come home after a long absence . |
4 | That would be a mistake : this is one of the most satisfying and interesting CDs I have come across in a long while . |
5 | A rectangular coil is located parallel to a long straight current-carrying wire as shown in Fig. 4.19 . |
6 | For the concession of hereditary tenure , though made piecemeal over a long period of time , was universal by the end of the century . |
7 | If on the other hand , a stress is applied slowly over a longer period the material flows like a viscous liquid so that the spherical shape is soon lost if left to stand for some time . |
8 | All the animals are in their cages , but they do n't seem to have very much space , and some of them have n't been fed properly for a long time . |
9 | He coveted the throne and had done so for a long time . |
10 | And during the next thirty years composers associated with the Académie set his poems , including a translation of the Psalms , to music in which , as Philip Sidney put it , ‘ every semibreif or mynom had its syllables matched accordingly with a long foote and a short foote ’ , not monodic but in harmony with each syllable sung simultaneously in all parts . |
11 | In particular , it has a lower jaw so loosely connected with the upper that it can be pushed forward like a long narrow spoon . |
12 | Carl had got home after a long day . |
13 | These important nuances are often recognised only after a long and intimate experience of the couple under study . |
14 | Anyone who is stupid enough to try and derail a train should be locked away for a long time . |
15 | This peak was not reached again for a long period , but by 1989 it had reached 76.4 per cent ( Employment Gazette , November 1989 ) . |
16 | Thus there was a confusing number of elements on earth , above it and below it which contributed to the afterlife , representing ideas which had been brought together over a long period of time . |
17 | A Mum and Dad who 'd known vaguely for a long time that Conor liked holding parties were suddenly being told over cups of tea and Hobnobs about vast acid house raves in the middle of fields , about police chases across whole counties , about an entire organisation that Conor had run ( Conor had run an organisation ? ) , which could call a party and have 5,000 people turning up at £20 a ticket within 48 hours . |
18 | ‘ The tackle from behind has been stopped here for a long time , but they were doing it all night and getting away with it . |
19 | ‘ Your Mummy has gone away for a long time ’ usually only serves to leave the child frightened but feeling the anxiety of the adults all around which forbids further discussion . |
20 | The flare had drifted slowly down behind the church on the village green and was followed quickly by a long burst of automatic fire . |
21 | This race came only two months after he had run well for a long way when leading the Hennessy Gold Cup at Newbury and Gaselee told me , ‘ He appeared to love the Newbury race and we were delighted with his performance at that time . ’ |
22 | They stood clasped together for a long time , then he bent his head and kissed her , softly at first , then with such increasing passion that she could feel his heart beating like a drum . |
23 | The final decision as to what to count is actually the solution to the problem in hand ; this decision is taken only through a long series of complicated exploratory maneuvers ’ ( Labov 1972a : 82 ) . |
24 | ‘ We 've always been really good friends but had n't worked together for a long time . |
25 | Nick Brown was cleared of drugs charges in Goa , but has only just been allowed home after a long campaign by his mother . |
26 | Kraemer and Roberts ( 1984 ) offer as justification for this assumption the suggestion that ‘ important ’ memories retain the ability to be retrieved even after a long retention interval whereas less important memories do not . |
27 | ‘ But poisons that would only kill if taken regularly over a long period of time , do they exist ? ’ |
28 | Not only did it fail to achieve representation ( not surprising at under 1 per cent of the vote ) but it has since fallen apart in a long series of internecine conflicts ( which are too complex to describe here ) . |
29 | They had lived together for a long time , but the sister was now reaching the conclusion that the situation could not continue much longer : |
30 | In these , he adopts a Kantian constructivist position which proposes certain basic categories through which alone the world may be apprehended , but recasts them as dynamic forms achieved only through a long process of interaction with the environment , in which the infant develops cognitive abilities as a means of dealing with the world . |