Example sentences of "a long time [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 But those old ideas do take a long time to die .
2 Littleton , Massachusetts-based Alliant Computer Systems Corp is taking a long time to die — too long for Craig Mundie , who resigned as president and chief executive to accept a position with Microsoft Corp as general manager , Advanced Consumer Technologies .
3 The picturesque view , which envisages life as art , took a long time to die .
4 I always make sure they take a long time to die . ’
5 The switched-off siren was taking a long time to die .
6 Victims frequently took a long time to die , often very unpleasantly .
7 But the wounds inflicted by the media will , it appears , take a long time to heal .
8 An old person who is bedbound may get pressure sores or ulcers in a very short time and these can take a long time to heal ( see page 78 ) .
9 The scars of Bosnia will take a long time to heal .
10 Relationships once broken in this way may take a long time to heal .
11 It 's taking a long time to heal . ’
12 No erm er even now , and the the strike 's been finished I ca n't remember four months or something , three months , you know the community I think it 'll take a a hell of a long time to heal the rifts and mend the scars .
13 ‘ The scars will take a long time to heal . ’
14 The difficulty here is that this would take a long time to carry out , besides which , there is the problem of access .
15 However , he stressed that economic growth was still heavily dependent on continued flows of external assistance , since the programmes under way would take a long time to carry out .
16 The four-cylinder engine was more reliable in 1957 , but BRM took a long time to realise that the P25 's air strut suspension — carried over from the V16 — was the cause of its savage oversteer .
17 It took Rauschning a long time to realise that his standpoint was exactly opposite to Forster 's .
18 It means so much to the supporters in the Oxford area , it means so much to the club , I think you 've really got to be up here for a long time to realise just how much it does mean to everybody in this area .
19 It seems doubtful that any strong moral reaction can now set in although some backlash is already evident ; a dissident minority and a good many of the elderly will continue for a long time to object to what they see as moral decay .
20 We got away with it somehow , but it took a long time to live that one down .
21 so it took me a long time to live down my weeds the lady with the weeds
22 Most of these solutions would take a long time to implement .
23 The letter expresses four concerns about the TGAT report : that the assessment proposals require an enormously elaborate and complex system ; that there will be heavy reliance on teachers ' judgements in addition to the nationally prescribed tests ; that the costs will be considerable ; and that the new system will take a long time to implement .
24 quite a long time to implement , for example
25 The climatic extremes of the far north mean that forests take a long time to regenerate .
26 The small block of semi-refined sugar , like cement , took a long time to dissolve .
27 He 's a fabulous guy and very funny , but it took a long time , and I do n't take credit for it , but it took a long time to put him in a situation where I felt that he was at maximum ‘ comfortableness ’ , so that his shyness — and he was very shy — was overcome .
28 We to put the decorations up in th in a s in a short time limit , the decorations take quite a long time to put up and as you know the decorations are erm are very famous er they 're nationally recognized .
29 She agrees with Gnome Pfeiffer ( coauthor of The Experience of Infertility , Virago ) that feminists took a long time to put infertility on the political agenda , and she suggests that this is partly due to attitudes toward motherhood .
30 O'Hara took a long time to kick-start the motorbike from the kerb .
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