Long
in sentence
12381 examples of Long in a sentence
Africa has had a
long
tradition of design, a well-defined design sensibility, but the problem in Africa has been that, especially today, designers in Africa struggle with all forms of design because they are more apt to look outward for influence and inspiration.
They've been looking outward for a
long
time, yet what they were looking for has been right there within grasp, right within them.
AO: You may think 13 hours is a
long
time to keep talking, but Derek does it effortlessly.
He said, "As
long
as you collect money by yourself, bring your students to build, you can do it."
He said, "As
long
as you bring your money, you can do it."
So I've seen life as one
long
learning process.
But about three months after the launch of the condom company, I had a letter, a complaint, and I sat down and wrote a
long
letter back to this lady apologizing profusely.
And making us go on wonderful,
long
bike rides.
If you need an alarm clock to get you out of bed in the morning, if you are taking a
long
time to get up, if you need lots of stimulants, if you're grumpy, if you're irritable, if you're told by your work colleagues that you're looking tired and irritable, chances are you are sleep-deprived.
You know, Lebanon as a country has been once destroyed by a
long
and bloody civil war.
Long
distance running was not only good for my well-being but it helped me meditate and dream big.
After a kind of long, awkward period of time, Steve broke the silence.
So over the
long
course of human history, the infectious disease that's killed more humans than any other is malaria.
This is a question that's personally intrigued me for a
long
time.
So the fearsome power of this little insect was apparent to me from a very young age, and it's one reason why I spent five years as a journalist trying to understand, why has malaria been such a horrible scourge for all of us for so very
long?
You see, technology's changing at a staggering rate, and that 250,000 pieces of malware won't stay the same for
long.
This sounds like a good theory, but I could talk for a
long
time, tell you lots of things, and a portion of them may be true, but I think it's better if I tried to show that to you here live.
And what if I had to travel a
long
distance to get to the grocery store, and I finally got my weak body out there and I consumed, in my food, enough of a pesticide, a neurotoxin, that I couldn't find my way home?
I decided to use a type of DNA origami, where you take a
long
strand of DNA and fold it into whatever shape or pattern you might want.
These short DNA sequences are what are going to fold the
long
strand into this shape that we want to make.
I mix them together, add a little bit of salt water, and then add this
long
strand I was telling you about, that I've stolen from a virus.
You cool it down to room temperature, and as you do, those short strands do the following thing: each one of them binds that
long
strand in one place, and then has a second half that binds that
long
strand in a distant place, and brings those two parts of the
long
strand close together so they stick together.
So the net effect of all 250 of these strands is to fold the
long
strand into the shape you're looking for.
For a
long
time in my life, I felt like I'd been living two different lives.
I suffer from depression, and for a
long
time, I think, I was living two totally different lives, where one person was always afraid of the other.
And a slinger is someone who has a leather pouch with two
long
cords attached to it, and they put a projectile, either a rock or a lead ball, inside the pouch, and they whirl it around like this and they let one of the cords go, and the effect is to send the projectile forward towards its target.
And then there's this whole weird thing about how
long
it takes Goliath to react to the sight of David.
So all of this focus on death doesn't mean that Torajans don't aspire to the ideal of a
long
life.
In reality, the relationship between the living and the dead has its own drama in the U.S. healthcare system, where decisions about how
long
to stretch the thread of life are made based on our emotional and social ties with the people around us, not just on medicine's ability to prolong life.
In fact, in Judaism, there were matchmakers a
long
time ago, and though they didn't have an explicit algorithm per se, they definitely were running through formulas in their heads, like, is the girl going to like the boy?
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