Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] far [adv prt] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ In pregnancies as far along as yours , one 's womb will expand and then contract after the termination , causing some pain and discomfort . |
2 | If you do not have Model Books as far back as 35 , all is still not lost . |
3 | Shafts of piercing sunlight slowly push their curious fingers through the dusty waters as far down as they will go . |
4 | Guests included 8 past presidents as far back as Roger Mansfield ( 1960–61 ) . |
5 | The race has been taxing young bloods as far back as the 17th Century . |
6 | First , there was the fact that the crucifix is mentioned in documents as far back as the 1500s , and since what was visible clearly was later in date , restorers reasoned that there must be something underneath it ; then there were the traces of thirteenth-century paint at the foot of the cross . |
7 | Nummulites are a giant kind of foraminiferan , an important group of rock-forming organisms as far back as the Carboniferous ( and with ancestors in Cambrian rocks ) , and which still form deep sea oozes today . |
8 | Leith is mentioned in historical records as far back as 1128 , but its authentic history as a port dates from 1329 when King Robert the Bruce granted a charter of ‘ The Harbour and Mills of Leith ’ to the City of Edinburgh . |
9 | London was linked to all parts of the provinces by weekly services as far back as the reign of Charles I and probably earlier . |
10 | The luxurious nature of the palace complex , of which this is thought to be only a wing , together with its spectacular position , led archaeologists as far back as 1976 to speculate that this was one of Herod 's palaces . |
11 | The Quarter can trace its roots as far back as 1460 , when work in precious metals is first recorded in Birmingham . |
12 | The real problem that Governments always face anywhere in the world is how to distribute central funds to regions and localities as far down as possible . |