Example sentences of "[adv] [vb pp] [art] long [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He was only spared a long jail term when 24-year-old Lynn agreed to drop assault charges providing he went into therapy .
2 Mota had already come a long way since her schooldays when she ran away with the city , area and national cross-country championships .
3 In Britain most children have already undergone a long period of conservative management at the hands of their general practitioners , often with trials of non-operative intervention using long term antibiotics .
4 He has already made a long statement , and you are letting him get away with it .
5 What was really said on that occasion is not on record but Wilberforce had just written a long review of Darwin 's book in the Quarterly Review and from this it seems clear that the good Bishop was by no means the fundamentalist reactionary which he is commonly supposed to have been .
6 Sheffield was a very different type of town , but like most other places that developed into great Victorian cities it had already had a long history as a market and craft centre .
7 Either way , the outcome is a marked legacy in the economic landscape , representing today the ‘ continuing influence of Britain 's historical international position ’ ( Massey , 1986 ) : by the time of the 1930s depression , some of the greatest industrial regions of Britain , the specialist production regions of textiles , steel , ships and coal exports , with their ports , had already entered a long period of continuous decline .
8 Owen Barfield , both in conversation and in writing , had already gone a long way in revealing to Lewis the fallacy of making sharp distinctions between ‘ myth ’ and ‘ fact ’ .
9 They also argue that the latest draft of the charter , drawn up by President Mitterrand , has already gone a long way to assuage Mrs Thatcher 's legitimate fears about the loss of British sovereignty .
10 The computerised exchange — known as Direct Dialling In ( DDI ) — has already gone a long way to reducing delays for the thousands of callers daily using the Essex Rivers Healthcare Trust switchboards .
11 You 're not old nan you 've just lived a long time
12 Mum always made a long list of groceries she needed but some days she bought even more things because there was so much to choose from .
13 Brothers , sisters , President , we 've still got a long way to go .
14 However , we 've still got a long way to go on working together with the health service ’ .
15 I do n't know , there 's still got a long way to go though
16 I know that some British civil servants are making considerable efforts to improve erm in these terms but erm I think we 've still got a long way to go in appreciating the importance of at least being able to understand somebody else 's language , erm even if you ca n't always erm communicate in it as well as you can in your own .
17 You money has always gone a long way in Thailand .
18 She had always taken a long time over her toilet : a review of her clothes ; a long-drawn-out bath ; massage ; manicure ; then her hair and make-up .
19 Morrissey , formerly lead singer of the Smiths and now a solo artist , is the central figure in this demi-monde and he has successfully mounted a long career based on a delightfully British blend of prurience and prudery .
20 He had also enjoyed a longer life than his father ; his younger brother Benjamin , to whom we now turn , was not to be so lucky .
21 Deaf schools in Britain have traditionally had a long involvement in the Scout and Girl Guide movement , but Scouting has not been confined simply to schoolboys and schoolgirls .
22 WordStar has probably got the longest pedigree of any of the current word processing packages , harking back to CP/M and beyond .
23 Few people are aware that he also pioneered a long line of excursion steamers on the Forth starting in 1813 .
24 For instance , a workman may be injured by a chip of metal flying off a hammer which had been negligently manufactured a long time before .
25 In Spain , for instance , no railway station had a hotel attached and passengers often had a long distance to travel from stations to reach their ultimate destination .
26 In a way I suppoise it was quite fortunate as we would have been without speed and wallace , who have now got a longer recovery period — as have all the other cripples that we 're carrying .
27 From being a simple pleasure that had helped take her mind off her troubles , it had now gone a long way towards restoring her rather battered pride .
28 In spite of her angry and tearful protests Charles insisted on giving the token to the woman who had haunted their courtship and has since cast a long shadow across their married life .
29 Well they 'd never , they had n't made a long player Amstrad did and now one or two of them are now are n't they ?
30 Great Yarmouth was successfully awarded a long term contract with Shell Expro , while Falkirk and Milford Haven increased their market share in support of the onshore petro-chemical industry .
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