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

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1 They bridge the gap between the desire of lenders to be able to get their money back quickly , and the desire of borrowers to borrow for a long period .
2 In those places where there is a delay in substantiation , faith is prepared to wait for a long time at the bar of history .
3 I remarked to my friend , ‘ You 'd have to wait for a long time to get a train from here , ’ he smiled and we both set off for the youth hostel down the road .
4 ‘ She 's wanted to go for a long time , ’ said Anne , nodding .
5 She would have liked to go for a long walk past the charming wedding-cake buildings that lined the promenade , but although it was only teatime , it was already too dark to see anything .
6 If they want to go for a longer period , a key worker would go out with them . ’
7 She 'd never known any details ; she did n't know if the accident happened early on , or whether she would have to sit for a long time just waiting for the inevitable .
8 This core of lava may continue to flow for a long while , but when the supply of fresh lava slows down at source , there will not be enough coming through to fill the whole volume of the core , so an empty space will be left , and this will form a long tube or tunnel running along the centre of the flow , sometimes for many kilometres .
9 People arriving in this country for such a purpose have to go through a long interview procedure to process their claims .
10 Most clubs , you have to go through a long rigmarole of being proposed and seconded and vouched for by other members and having your background scrutinised , and weeks and months go by before you 're elected .
11 They had to go through a long interrogation , and their answers were not found to be satisfactory .
12 He claimed there should be no erosion of traditional fishing areas , and stressed that each application would have to go through a long process before being granted .
13 This achieves much more in the long run than attempting to concentrate for a long time until fatigue sets in .
14 At a buffet you ensure that elderly and infirm guests , and those who have travelled long distances , have seats near the buffet table so that they are not obliged to stand for a long period .
15 A place you try to find after a long absence …
16 Salt had recovered from her first surprise and was about to launch into a longer attack .
17 The woman led him away , leaving Charlotte to wander into a long pine-panelled room with a huge stone fireplace at the far end and a picture window to her right commanding a view of the terraced front garden and the curving drive up which she had walked .
18 The sound had seemed to come from a long way over the heath to the right .
19 I heard a voice which seemed to come from a long distance — ‘ Throw the bastard down .
20 Bipeds evolved larger digestive tracts which one would normally expect to find in a longer , heavier stomach cavity in front of the hips , which would present anatomical problems in balancing .
21 I imagine that you would also be aware that the only reason the Pentagon produces such figures is to extract from a long suffering American tax-payer billions upon billions of extra dollars in order to pursue its own lunatic military fantasies .
22 He looked at her and said , adopting roguishness , ‘ Would you like to come on a long journey with me ?
23 I just want to briefly introduce this , I do n't want to speak in any great , we have had a long debate in house do you if you wish to engage in a long debate again in view of the time tonight .
24 It was to lead to a long period of self-confessed misery for her , including beatings by her tranquilliser-addicted mother and spells of being locked naked with her sister in cupboards .
25 The meandering reminiscence of boarding-school rituals is like being forced to listen to a long , pointless story about an acquaintance 's childhood .
26 Several transplants have been tried before , but this is the first time they have continued to function for a long period , according to the researchers at the University of Alberta , in Edmonton .
27 The hurdle of post office reform has brought down French ministers of state before now , notably Pierre Lelong , who held the posts and telecommunications portfolio in Jacques Chirac 's government but was forced to resign after a long and bitter strike in 1974 .
28 You 're heartlessly manipulating your mother into believing that we 're about to embark on a long and happy marriage , and you 're doing it by manipulating me .
29 As the right hon. Gentleman is now keen to look at a longer period than just the last year , he will also be interested to know that between 1981 and 1991 the British economy grew faster than the German economy , the French economy , the Italian economy or the economy of any other country in Europe .
30 A horse that is fit for hunting may be unable to cope with a long schooling session .
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