Example sentences of "[vb infin] in [art] long [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | My guess however is that the Ariston 's unusually musical qualities will appeal in the long term where some more glamorous looking contrivances will ultimately be found tiresome or wanting . |
2 | All of them are now under review to make sure they are ‘ in a particular market where we can win in the long term ’ . |
3 | But we may expect in the long run to become as comfortable in the new clothes as we were in the old . |
4 | Yeah , mind you his , his short er term policies so it does n't matter in the long run . |
5 | Perhaps the United States itself would benefit in the long run from a more flexible policy on sterling and other matters . |
6 | You would probably both benefit in the long term by coming to such a compromise as interests and contacts from outside can save you both from the trapped feeling that a dependent relationship can bring about . |
7 | To a certain extent it does not matter how well a product performs if the user takes a strong dislike to it then it will not succeed in the long run . |
8 | Whilst this representation provides a very compact method of holding and handling a wide range of the common geometric forms found in engineering , it can result in a long processing time when real model edges have to be determined in complex models . |
9 | It is concluded that the transposed colon retains its normal motility pattern but some adaptation to its new location may occur in the long term . |
10 | But I ca n't see in the long run that it would make any difference to what we 've been talking about , seeing who Maggie is . |
11 | The public relations executive , as a manager of the corporate personality , can only sustain in the long term , an identity that is based upon reality . |
12 | Even extremists of the 1960s , who believed that the task of a school was to ensure that children enjoyed themselves while they were pupils , must have had in mind , as well , some further outcome , some advantage that would flow in the long run to the children who had been encouraged , under that regime , to ‘ grow ’ and ‘ blossom ’ and ‘ flourish ’ in the ‘ learning situation ’ provided by the class-room . |
13 | The direction an organisation will move in the long term |
14 | If changes in conditions disrupt the precise replication of parental characters so as to yield hereditary variation , then , providing only that some of it happens to be adaptive , this will suffice in the long run for selection as a cause of adaptive species formations . |
15 | Sir David Alliance , Coats chairman , said the sales were part of Coats ' continuing policy of disposing of peripheral activities that do not fit in the long term strategy of the group . |
16 | He would n't have time to save himself ; the splash as he entered the stream would be the most satisfying sound she would hear in a long time . |
17 | while purchasing power parity may hold in the long run if real shocks are unimportant , in the short run the exchange rate is not caused by PPP considerations ; rather , with the exchange rate clearing the asset markets , variations in international competitiveness lead to equilibrating changes in the size of the traded goods sector . |
18 | If one was punctual and could pay in the long run , why incur the debt at all ? |
19 | That may still be prudent if your fish are in the top-quality bracket , but otherwise it may pay in the long run to be looking at 12″ Koi upwards . |
20 | Thus we have Macdonald reporting on the " almost unanimous chorus of opinion that women 's work as compositors is so inferior to men 's that it does not pay in the long run " ( the chorus in question being from employers ) But the testimony of individual employers is far from unanimous or even consistent . |
21 | It does n't pay in the long run . |
22 | While the EV figures will only be guidelines for any individual project , the expected and actual cumulative figures will converge in the long run if the method is consistently applied , maximizing the productivity of the R&D function . |
23 | While the EV figures will only be guidelines for any individual project , the expected and actual cumulative figures will converge in the long run if the method is consistently applied , maximizing the productivity of the R&D function . |
24 | ‘ Not last night ; I heard him come in a long time after I went to bed . |
25 | Other conundra m–y appear rather less cosmically' relevant ; they may seem to be of little importance yet , like Mercury 's orbit , may prove in the long term to be extremely important . |
26 | But do not be downhearted if your story is not taken up , or indeed ousted at the last moment because a major story comes up : your campaign will not suffer in the long run . |
27 | It 's the children who will suffer in the long run . ’ |
28 | Begging or threatening tactics wo n't help in the long run either . |
29 | He ca n't see that does n't help in the long run if , |
30 | The family member is determined to " help " the primary sufferer : ( a ) regardless of whether this " helping " actually does help in the long term . |