Example sentences of "[vb pp] a [adv] long [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He had come a very long way in the decade since his wife had failed to win a Belfast Corporation seat !
2 Well Ivan has brought along this harp which is actually an Irish harp which has come a very long way .
3 He 's come a very long way to see what you 've got to say as well as hear the stories .
4 She would be falsely modest not to acknowledge the fact that she had come a very long way since those days when she had been a thin , gawky adolescent .
5 ‘ This is something I should 'ave done a very long time ago .
6 The tenant should therefore initially attempt to delete clause 5.2.2 , but if this is not accepted a sufficiently long date should be inserted in it .
7 backing up , when I er , at , at the appeal , the medical centre made a very long presentation over the proximity , the closeness to their erm , surgery and they argued about the height of buildings , now it got passed as sheltered united , er , which means elderly and quiet occupancy .
8 But it is t it is erm very good they 've got a very long waiting list I was helping
9 So far , we 've actually managed to characterise about 1600 of that 50,000 and so we 've got a very long way to go .
10 ‘ Yet in the long run — and we have already had a pretty long run — the results are potentially devastating . ’
11 Yes and on the whole recently we 've had prisoners who been imprison for sort of two or three years , we 've , we 've made up petitions , we 've sent postcards and we 've , we 've written letters and er they 've been released in reasonably short space of time , but then mostly the prisoners which , who have n't had a very long sentence , unlike the one I mentioned on the way here tonight , have the Russian who had been in thirty years
12 ‘ He does n't usually throw tantrums , ’ Ashley said ruefully , as Vitor came round from the boot , ‘ but he has had a very long day . ’
13 ‘ We 've travelled a tremendously long road and this is a great day for us , ’ he said .
14 It looked as if we 'd travelled a very long way to get nowhere .
15 By the time Siward 's army had reached the plains by the Forth , it would have marched a very long way , and suffered fighting , and would be drawn , in any case , only from those regions Siward was master of , for neither Wessex nor Mercia , it was sure , would waste men on extending Northumbria 's empire .
16 In comparison with the inhibition effect , however , this facilitation only occurred when the subject was given a relatively long time to read the context .
17 This one came just as eyelids were beginning to droop at Tynecastle on Saturday when Hearts and Hibs staged the latest in what has become a very long series of tedious confrontations .
18 Now that it was over Edward seemed to have gone a very long way away from her , as if she was no more than a stranger to whom he was giving a lift .
19 They had gone a very long way into the tunnel .
20 If nothing else , it has cast a mighty long shadow down the years .
21 ‘ He stated it had all started a very long time ago when he was serving in the army in India and he admitted to still being sexually frustrated . ’
22 The record 's gone through a lot of transformations and taken a hellaciously long time to get done . ’
23 ‘ It ca n't be denied that all this has taken a very long time to come about , but I think that , political wrangling aside , much of the delay has been due to genuine uncertainty about the tax implications of moving money around from one body to another .
24 The disentangling of ancient mergers that we observe here has taken a very long time , and the best explanation for the persistence of this alternating class is again a social explanation : the ‘ vernacular ’ alternant carries an identity function and strong connotations of closeness and intimacy .
25 So they 've kept a very long time .
26 Like all other departments we have been established a very long time and therefore have the experience and the knowledge in dealing with lettings .
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