Example sentences of "have [verb] a long way " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 The industry has come a long way since the day 's of men selling cornets from the back of bicycles .
32 Whitham has come a long way from April 16 , 1988 when he won the Enkalon 1,000cc race and became one of the few English riders to score at Kirkistown at that time .
33 Jamie Whitham : has come a long way since Kirkistown back in 1988 .
34 Tupperware , it seems , has come a long way .
35 There is no gainsaying the fact that London-born Eleanor Bowen has come a long way since her last exhibition at the Durham Art Gallery some eight years ago .
36 Mr Fallon said : ‘ The Dyslexia Institute has come a long way since 1973 and has raised the profile of dyslexia in the country .
37 Either way he has come a long way in a very short time , especially for someone who left journalism for PR at the age of 22 after failing to break into daily newspapers .
38 It sounds like the Fire Service has come a long way from the early years .
39 Er psychiatry has come a long way and er certain diagnostic st studies and diagnostic tests are taken of the individual erm and the doctors conclude whether or not the the work contributed to the problem or not .
40 The former RAF engineer , of Eskdale , Skelmersdale , has come a long way since 1982 when he suffered a serious heart attack and his health then gradually deteriorated to the point where surgeons at Wythenshawe Hospital , Manchester , eventually decided that a heart transplant was Mr Brownrigg 's only chance .
41 Packaging technology has come a long way since the founder opened his first shop in 1869 , and the requirements of today 's customer are very different from those of the Victorian housewife .
42 Air refuelling has come a long way from the first attempts in the thirties where the co-pilot literally popped out and grabbed the hose .
43 Interviewing him in his office in the Department of Transport , an ugly high-rise building that has the compensation of a superb panorama of London , dominated by Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament , it is hard to avoid the conclusion that MacGregor has moved a long way up the greasy pole .
44 Kapil has advanced a long way since he burst onto the international scene in the late 1970s .
45 While the press , led by The Hindu , has gone a long way to proving that Bofors handed out millions of dollars to Indian middlemen , the identity of the ultimate recipients of the money remains a mystery .
46 Indeed the latest text has gone a long way towards meeting the UK 's objections . ’
47 Cuba has gone a long way to reducing gender inequalities , though power relations still clearly favour men , a fact of which all Cubans , including their leaders , are very aware .
48 This minor impediment for the flanker is just sufficient to allow a fraction more time and space for the half-back to get things moving and has gone a long way to assist in opening the game up .
49 And in fact patient research has gone a long way towards resolving this knotty problem .
50 The Community has gone a long way towards achieving that central purpose ; towards taming nationalism without suppressing patriotism ; towards sharing sovereignty without destroying nations ; and towards putting the magic of markets to work for society in a stable democratic setting .
51 I think the Home Secretary has gone a long way to meet many anxieties which were expressed
52 Fortunately , our neutering scheme has gone a long way to alleviating this problem . ’
53 But do n't pick up any more thorns , Hlao-roo , because we may have to go a long way . "
54 ‘ You would have to go a long way to see a better game than that .
55 As usual , they are lost and confused , having floated a long way from home .
56 Diesel technology may have come a long way , but even a BMW lets out a puff or two of blue smoke when starting from cold , and takes a minute or two to settle into its stride .
57 But the plain fact is , and genuinely I mean this , er , er , erm , if it were as simple working across the boundaries between yourselves and the Health Authority , between yourselves and the private sector , with the voluntary sector , and the great army of unpaid helpers if it was that simple , erm , then we would have moved a long way along that line towards implementation of a humane and caring care in the community twenty years ago , when these debates first started .
58 They are most grateful for a pump within yards of their homes , instead of having to walk a long way to a dirty water-hole .
59 And I think it w w was quite difficult for people because they 'd either have to walk a long way to try and make a telephone call .
60 We might have to look a long way back . ’
  Previous page   Next page