Similar words: alongside, long, long., along, long for, prolong, all along, get along. Meaning: adv. of the distant or comparatively distant past.
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61) Now 82 and long since retired, Pearl started out as a boxing judge before stepping inside the ring.
62) Standing in the fields were pieces of farm machinery that had long since fallen into disrepair.
63) Sarcasm I now see to be, in general, the language of the Devil; for which reason I have, long since, as good as renounced it. Thomas Carlyle
64) Fear of the future had long since beaten that out of the young.
65) I sat on a log among the shadows of creatures now extinct and others long since departed for pasture in the south.
66) Books had long since been recycled into toilet paper and what have you.
67) Stevenson has long since taken his towering presence and pounding fists into retirement.
68) It had been so long since she had seen snow she had almost forgotten about it.
69) The town which Joyce wrote about has long since ceased to exist.
70) A bitter smile touched his lips at that, for hadn't Grainne long since been lost?
71) He has long since withdrawn his name from Who's Who, declines to accept honorary degrees and refuses to be interviewed.
72) Among genres long since completed and inpart already dead, the novel is the only developing genre.
73) But that system has long since gone out the window.
74) Clearly he had long since trained himself to tune out all awareness of boys unless they menaced his engine or coachwork.
75) By the time they finally play at home, everyone else will have long since had their home openers.
76) The respectable residents have long since fled to the suburbs to escape the inner city pathologies.
77) But leaders, having achieved self-possession, have long since recovered their creative powers, too, and have continued to grow.
78) The presumed answer is that the golden age has long since disappeared below the horizon of memory.
79) Women who had long since stopped listening except to their own ossified ramblings.
80) The team were trudging off the pitch, the diamonds on their shirt-sleeves having long since lost their lustre.
81) The hour had long since passed for his call to Virginia Stillman, and he debated whether to go through with it.
82) Each course involves still further political damage to Major, his earlier Teflon coating having long since worn through.
83) Some are relict populations of forms which, on the mainland, have long since succumbed in the struggle for survival.
84) Leathery tans long since fell from favour, but a healthy glow is still considered the picture of vitality.
85) The ecological setting was similar to that of today,(www.Sentencedict.com) except for an alkaline lake which has long since evaporated.
86) Some places she taught, like Helvetia and Sasco, have long since turned to rubble.
87) By this time, of course, Mwafrika and its successors had long since lost their former political stance.
88) John, of course, had long since lost his northern accent and took delight in his appearance as the well-heeled businessman.
89) Nor indeed were many unmodified humans nearly as robust as the cadets had long since become.
90) For most lay Catholics, the debate over Church policy has long since passed into irrelevance.
More similar words: alongside, long, long., along, long for, prolong, all along, get along, as long as, no longer, so long as, belong to, longtime, any longer, long-term, since, along with, before long, long before, in the long run, get along with, ever since, angst, earnings, bearings, youngster, single, singer, casino, cousin.