Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] [prep] [art] long [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | In its shadow , in a square of orange brickwork part hidden by the long grass , stood a circular pool . |
2 | However , the level of total exports and of exports of manufactures rose throughout the long boom and the 1970s . |
3 | Only once was a jarring note struck , and that was when Roger referred to the long room leading out of the kitchen as the ‘ museum ’ . |
4 | Lee Harpin ODs on a long weekend of TV football |
5 | There is one important difference : the Prime Minister and his Cabinet can embark boldly upon their way forward , with electoral considerations banished for a long time to come . |
6 | Organ jazz has for a long time been club-trendy but it has taken until now for a new artist to come through to match the likes of Jimmy Smith and ‘ Big ’ John Patton with whom she shares a clear affinity in her choice of rhythms and blues inflections . |
7 | Lucenzo dragged her bags with him and muttered under his breath about their bulk while Meredith stoically forced her exhausted body after his dark figure , her legs aching with the long climb . |
8 | Her kiss at the cottage gate left my mind occupied during the long walk back to the farm . |
9 | She unfastened her own belt , and as her arms wound about his neck their lips met in a long kiss . |
10 | The light came from a long mirror surrounded by unshaded bulbs . |
11 | A warm wind shone through the long stubble which shimmered like silk in the heat ; the sun glared off the metal cabs of lorries and buses , the tar melted into mirages of water and cleared again . |
12 | The stout refusal , and then the shambling figure going up the long path beside the river , up to the house . |
13 | The words arrived on a long feather of smoke . |
14 | The sea still echoed the storm , foot-high waves breaking with a long hush against the shingle , but the sky was blue and clear . |
15 | The authors believe the cause of these persistent spells lies in the ability of the short waves to react on the long waves in such a way that , under certain situations , they favour the very pattern that caused them . |
16 | In order to test these predictions we need to compare the size of the latent inhibition effect found after a long exposure — test interval ( which we may take to be 24 h or more ) with that found after a short interval ( when conditioning follows exposure immediately or after a few minutes ) . |
17 | The correct word-path is excluded from many mid and mixed utterances because an alternative parsing into a long word is preferred . |
18 | Marilla thought for a long time . |
19 | She had n't been paying much attention to the journey , and did n't have any idea of where they were ; the archway led into a long courtyard with a cobbled surface and small , squeezed-in houses to either side . |
20 | And so it was all along the line , from Telnitz in the south , right the way to the Olmütz road , where the plain rose into the foothills of the mountains to the north ; and after he had disappeared into the tumult and light , neither Thiercelin nor Epitot spoke for a long time . |
21 | The cat with yellow eyes crouched in the long grass in pursuit of a bird . |
22 | And it is hard not to think of one 's own horror at some of the things that the Irgun and Stern Gang are doing in Palestine , for instance , ’ David said after a long silence . |
23 | Euparkeria , with more pronounced legs balanced by a long tail , was probably a more direct forerunner of dinosaurs than Ornithosuchus , but it was smaller and more agile . |
24 | Such factors may include , for instance , a previous experience of loss which was dealt with badly , unresolved grief , past experience of failure , a lack of a sense of self-efficacy , a low self-esteem , a previous history of psychiatric disorder , and an absence of close relationships established over a long period of time . |
25 | Their eyes held for a long time and then he rested back on his elbows and looked at the treetops , his face suddenly serious . |
26 | The headless trunk stood for a long second , the blood fountaining in a gush of scarlet from the raw stump of its neck , before collapsing bonelessly to the mat . |
27 | His preliminary architectural sketches hung in a long glass frame on the passage wall inside the cottage . |
28 | Perhaps the attitude developed during a long period of established practice and little change . |
29 | The water cascaded down the face of the spillway again , the noise like a million stamping feet heard from a long way off . |
30 | Residential institutions lost favour and became associated with , if not blamed for , the lack of professional vision and determination to plan for the long term future of children . |