long-term - use in sentences

Modifying Another Word

  • especially: Hence modeling accurate predictions, especially long-term ones, is either downright impossible or fraught with immense difficulties.
  • potentially: How We Can help This factsheet has concentrated on potentially long-term tax factors to bear in mind.
  • very: I think that some of our human nature is mutable, but changing it is a very long-term project.
  • so: The harmful effects can be cumulative, so long-term exposure to short periods of loud noise can produce hearing loss years later.
  • then: If renal failure is irreversible ( a condition known as end stage renal failure or ESRF ), then long-term dialysis becomes necessary.
  • not: Nonlethal weapons are legal with respect to jus in bello if the effects of the weapon are not long-term, debilitating, or irreversible.

Preposition: at

  • fee: Our mission is to provide high quality services to our clients over the long-term at competitive fees.

Adjective modifier

  • important: Most important long-term each family member however at least.

Modifies a noun

  • unemployment: Long-term youth unemployment is down by some 80 per cent.
  • commitment: A key problem is a lack of long-term commitments from the donor countries.
  • sustainability: More importantly, the Development Officer will be striving to build momentum within each region to ensure long-term sustainability of each group.
  • illness: Staff must keep notes relating to long-term illnesses or injuries.
  • preservation: While long-term preservation has been identified as a requirement, there are no unified archiving policies at either European or national level.
  • trend: See ' Long-term trends - National recorded crime ' for charts showing long-term trends in recorded crime.

Used with adjective complement

  • think: The first is how do we get the world to think long-term about this?
  • meet: To meet long-term the policies a the mortgage and.
  • provide: We should be thinking of career mortgages that provide long-term.
  • require: Children, adolescents and younger adults requiring long-term, higher dose steroid therapy pose particular management difficulties.
  • plan: It's tax effective and provides the charity with regular income, enabling us to plan long-term.
  • take: This is normally a medication that needs to be taken long-term.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.