Example sentences of "and [vb past] [prep] [art] long " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Helen leaned over my shoulder and gazed at the long lines of boy scouts , girl guides , ex-servicemen , with half the population of the town packed on the pavements , watching .
2 He did not have time to check his mirrors for police cars as he passed All Hallows-on-the-Wall and plunged into the long straight canyon of London Wall .
3 ‘ Best hang tight to my arm , boy , ’ he yelled and together they leaned forward and tramped through the long wet grass to wrestle with the Littles ' gate .
4 I crossed wet ground and came to a long , open piece of sand , then went on to a place where the trees had branches that were thick and close to the sand .
5 She closed her eyes again , tossed and turned for a long time , then finally managed to get a couple of hours of disturbed sleep .
6 As they came up into the May morning he hopped over the ditch and skipped into the long grass as blithe as a squirrel .
7 That leaves mothers , children and older people behind in the mad scramble for the doors when the bus arrives , to stand packed together jolted and elbowed for the long slow journeys .
8 In a few hours I felt reborn and replete with new powers , washed clean and cured of a long sickness , finally ready to enter life with joy and vigour ; equally cured was suddenly the world around me , and exorcised the name and face of the woman who had gone down into the lower depths with me and had not returned .
9 They stayed on the hill and talked for a long time .
10 As they left the confines of the city and started on the long straight empty road to Samana , the sun was glowing ruby-red behind the dark wooded hills , the sky translucent delicate silk .
11 ‘ I have no intention of meeting her , ’ Jenna began , but he too stood and looked towards the long windows as a car came speedily to the house .
12 On reaching the top of the hill , Tess paused and looked for a long time at the familiar green world of home .
13 We climbed the low hills northwest of the loch and lay in the long grass under the pines and the birch , looking out over the small glen to the forested hill on the far side where the old railway tunnel was .
14 Silently , I climbed back up to the road and lay in the long grass to watch what happened .
15 He answered Buckmaster 's question as he turned off the road between lodge gates and proceeded down the long drive across open parkland .
16 Lambert and Church bowled past the two-seater and eased into a long right-hand turn to follow the German planes , Lambert firing short bursts to attract their attention .
17 The moment she hit one of the papers , she braked and went into a long skid , sliding right across the kitchen floor to the other wall , which she thumped into , still standing on her ‘ magic carpet ’ .
18 Through the gate and over the lumpy ground , and she opened the door and went into a long drill hall with a clacking wooden floor .
19 He found the house that he was looking for and went into a long , low room .
20 During her researches she went to Lord 's to examine the immense collection which belongs to the MCC and went into the Long Room .
21 I put on my coat and went for a long walk on the moor .
22 Henry passed her some thin , crustless brown bread and butter and listened to a long story about fox-hunting .
23 It stayed there and grew for a long time , until it was a real baby .
24 They turned into the dining room , and gasped at the long row of glowing candles which stretched down the table to the further limits of vision .
25 The local children used to play in the cutting and had for a long time fancied the hut as a den or HQ for their games , but the hut was always locked by a large padlock securing a hasp that was red with rust but still secured the door .
26 Its exceptionally shaggy coat , almost yak-like , covers its face as well as its body , and becomes matted and felted after a long winter .
27 Bigwig jumped down from the bank into the field and ran in a long curve across the wet grass .
28 She asked for the secretary and launched on a long story about phoning from a restaurant where a pair of leather gloves had been found apparently left by the lady with Mr Johnston whom one of the waiters had remembered seeing at the sports club .
29 Dot waited and waited in the long brown corridor with nowhere to sit .
30 This brought one of Neil 's cracks of laughter and the comment , ‘ A wily gent , I see , ’ and then silence took over again , and lasted for a long time , until the front door opened , and Matey returned from the sewing circle at St Jude 's Church Hall , and stared at them , sitting there in the dusk , hunched over the board , rapt .
  Next page