Example sentences of "be [adj] over " in BNC.
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1 | Although its milling days are long over , the mill now forms a useful storage building as well as housing a small electronics workshop , a far cry from the days of steam and dust featured throughout its century of use . |
2 | Just tell her the names of those books and I tell you she 'll be right over . ’ |
3 | We 'll be right over . ’ |
4 | THE World Cup may be well over , but there 's no forgetting some of the performances we saw in October 1991 . |
5 | Programmes were long over , but the white screen with the volume down served not badly as a night light ; any of the lamps in the shoebox room kept Sam awake , and total darkness made him frightened . |
6 | Fifty years before , gold had been discovered at Bathurst and wages had been spectacular , but those boom times were well over and the rush now was for any job at all and to fight to keep it . |
7 | The Rush Years were well over . |
8 | Due to the extensive television coverage practically every hole on the course , and certainly all those on the second nine , can be conjured up in the mind 's eye , even when the tournament is long over . |
9 | ‘ The question of whether we 're going to clean up the environment of this country is long over , ’ he told a press conference . |
10 | By then the breeding season is well over . |
11 | The row was well over , however , and meeting Mallachy on the corner near his house caused no further friction . |
12 | Necessity sometimes drove half-pay officers to seek a commission in an active battalion even when they had attained such an advanced age that any chance of a successful military career was long over . |
13 | Tea was long over and , downstairs , the evening 's work was well under way . |
14 | The great church was mute and dark , for compline was long over , since the routine of the house clung as yet to its winter timetable , and the monks were in their beds until midnight should rouse them for matins . |
15 | When she did finally reach for the food , or lure , all she would do was lean over and rip off a piece , rather than step on to the glove . |