Use "long since" in a sentence

1. How long since is it?

2. They had long since moved away.

3. I've long since stopped caring about him.

4. Other staff had long since gone home.

5. She had long since abandoned that hope.

6. The original building has long since been demolished.

7. Any doubts had long since been swept away.

8. The city has long since passed into oblivion.

9. It was not long since that I returned.

10. He had long since gone dead on politicians.

11. He had long since given up reading the tabloids.

12. Dad had long since divested himself of anything valuable.

13. This idea has long since fallen out of favour.

14. The soldiers have long since returned to their bases.

15. Her parents had long since branded her a failure.

16. I've long since forgiven her for what she did.

17. I've long since forgotten what our quarrel was about.

18. It once sealed a document that has long since decayed.

19. 24 Her parents had long since branded her a failure.

20. The people who built this temple have long since vanished.

21. He had long since wearied of discussing the rancorous subject.

22. It's been far too long since we've seen each other.

23. Sounds of laughter from a dark auditorium had long since ceased.

24. She has long since moved on from the roles of her youth.

25. Its tower has long since collapsed, and only the assembly hall remains.

26. The UN is an organisation which has long since outlived its usefulness.

27. It's so long since it rained that the river-bed is dry.

28. I had long since grown used to the eccentricities of his driving technique.

29. Most have long since gone, leaving behind their legacy of sunless, blanket afforestation.

30. It hasn't even been that long since he was promoted to assistant manager.

31. Such policies are equivalent to trying to resuscitate a patient long since dead.

32. Much of the mountain consists of volcanic ash, long since hardened to jagged rock.

33. ‘This decades-old machine has long since been surpassed by Bevatrons and linear accelerators.’

34. 20 Most have long since gone, leaving behind their legacy of sunless, blanket afforestation.

35. It has not been long since Changan joined the Pakistani autoforce, but the company …

36. This is not some ancient practice, some relic from the past long since abandoned.

37. It has been far too long since I last gazed upon a lovely English rose.

38. Old tattered flags hung from the ceiling, their patterns long since faded into the air.

39. In 1990, Coral Sea, which had long since earned the nickname "Ageless Warrior", was decommissioned.

40. That one has long since vanished, as a result of the Falls' implacable backward erosion.

41. The government had long since perceived that the way west depended on the transcontinental railroad.

42. “Decomposition was well under way; death had long since been established as an absolute certainty.

43. The stones of the church are dark with age and the roof has long since gone.

44. 30 For most lay Catholics, the debate over Church policy has long since passed into irrelevance.

45. Standing in the fields were pieces of farm machinery that had long since fallen into disrepair.

46. For on a national level, New Labour has long since abandoned any Old Labour-style Antagonism …

47. The awkward, box-like products of the past have long since been replaced by smaller, slicker versions.

48. Predictably, the international media circus, with its Olympian disdain for the parochial, has long since moved on.

49. Even though her parents have long since died, she still talks about them in the present tense.

50. They, too, reasoned that Death, having gorged itself on their neighbours, would have long since moved on.

51. Thankfully our highway authorities have long since shunned the practice of Anglicising place names on road signs.

52. But since most of London's heavy industry has long since gone, there must be other explanations too.

53. A mercenary who has long since sold his conscience for gold can hardly presume to judge his employers.

54. Some dictionaries consider Arrant simply an alternative form of errant, but in usage they have long since split.

55. The talk of setting aside a corner of the pasture for superannuated animals had long since been dropped.

56. Even though her parents have long since died,[Sentencedict.com] she still talks about them in the present tense.

57. Unmourned and Besmirched the last of the Oxford toasts has long since passed beyond the judgment of man

58. It had houses on it in Roman and Byzantine times, and the stone lion has long since vanished.

59. Long since abandoned by the sea, Rye is now a hilltop town affording super views of the surrounding countryside.

60. The team were trudging off the pitch, the diamonds on their shirt-sleeves having long since lost their lustre.

61. The north and south traffic on Vermont was separated by tracks for the old yellow trolley cars, long since defunct.

62. The town outside was long since ruined and empty, and he preferred St Hilarion in the heat of the day.

63. The hour had long since passed for his call to Virginia Stillman, and he debated whether to go through with it.

64. Lily Aped the manners of girls who had long since graduated from school and were flashy in their dress and manners

65. Captain Robins was a Yorkshireman in his fifties who had long since lost his accent amidst the welter of a dozen dialects.

66. The tortoises of the family Trionychidae form an exclusively Arctogaean group, once ranging all over the realm, although long since extinct in Europe

67. Foreign Minister Lavrov (replies after Gates and Rice): I wanted to add that what was in October has long since been utterly discussed.

68. 1856 MI Farmer 14.151, I have good neighbors, not such as are commonly called “Backwoodsers,” for they all came from some place not long since

69. The Papua New Guinea Government has long since taken steps to ensure that school discipline is administered in a manner consistent with a child’s dignity.

70. No evidence, at once so slight and irrefragable , of a subtle disease that had long since begun to eat into the real substance of his character.

71. Choosing to live in the style of the 1830s, her clothes, her home, and her way of life all hearken back to an era long since past.

72. They were not sickened by such exhibitions because the ghastly butcheries of the amphitheatre had long since debased their feelings and perverted their instincts.” —Matthew 5:27, 28.

73. I have long since abandoned the notion that higher education is essential to either success or happiness. Hot houses of learning do not always grow anything edible. 

74. To put in or assign to an unfavorable place, position, or condition: "Their desponding imaginations had long since Consigned him to a watery grave" (William Hickling Prescott).

75. 28 I have long since abandoned the notion that higher education is essential to either success or happiness. Hot houses of learning do not always grow anything edible. 

76. 30 I have long since abandoned the notion that higher education is essential to either success or happiness. Hot houses of learning do not always grow anything edible. 

77. A tarnished picture frame sitting on a crate beside the bed contained pictures of Susan 's parents and siblings from whom , we later learned , she had long since been separated .

78. The phrase “Auld lang syne” literally translates to “old long since,” and basically means, “days gone by.” The original, five-verse version of the poem essentially gets people singing, “let’s drink

79. Starting Ancestors over again from the beginning is a major drag, having to re-discover every leaf and plant I've already long since grown tired of gathering, sniffing, and tasting—not to

80. The best bulls to ever buck in the pitch,Hey guys, it is been a long since I uploaded my latest video (which is also about Bucking Bulls) I just want to than