Example sentences of "[noun] have a long tradition [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The convent has a long tradition of illustrating cards and books with delicate hand-crafted watercolours and inscriptions . |
2 | The approach of classroom testing against the hearing norms has a long tradition among educators and researchers . |
3 | It is possibly true of ‘ Bonn ’ : Germany has a long tradition of unease about England which has been kept alive.and well in influential papers such as Die Zeit and elsewhere . |
4 | The Social Work Department has a long tradition of working in collaboration with other service providers . |
5 | Established in 1912 , Olympus has a long tradition of good design , using the finest materials and quality craftsmanship . |
6 | Cancer research had a long tradition of support from private contributions , but new charities devoted to particular diseases , such as arthritis and rheumatism , leukaemia , and muscular dystrophy , were founded and became a great source of strength to workers whose interests had or might have application to the desired objectives . |
7 | Swindon Town and Oxford United fans have a long tradition of rivalry . |
8 | But kids have a long tradition of getting the better of adults , going back to the Famous Five and beyond . |
9 | Scotland has a long tradition of exporting its talents . |
10 | Ulster has a long tradition of rural industry and peasant agriculture . |
11 | The LGC has a long tradition of providing support services and policy advice to the government . |
12 | Research on natural hazards has a long tradition in geography going back more than half a century . |
13 | The concept of an independent development agency has a long tradition in Britain . |
14 | That area of Aberdeenshire has a long tradition of producing outstanding personalities . |
15 | This country has a long tradition of accepting genuine political refugees , but there is no doubt that the fact that three quarters of all applications are made by people who have been living in this country for weeks , months and , in some cases , years , is tantamount to an abuse of the system . |
16 | The main exponents of this approach — writers like Hyman , Beynon and Fox — all take conflict to be a major structural component of employment ; although we should also note that sociology in fact has a longer tradition of exploring the distinctive problems of explanation and understanding associated with industrial conflict ( eg. Eldridge , 1968 ) . |