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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a long interval" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a significant amount of time that separates two events or occurrences.
Example: "After a long interval, the two friends finally met again at the café."
Alternatives: "an extended period" or "a lengthy gap".
Exact(60)
After the Kuznetsk Basin came a long interval of meadows.
How frightened I have been!" he said, after a long interval.
So began a long interval during which Swann was a jobbing county cricketer, successful enough but never really a star.
He endured a long interval of odd jobs and no job, with summer stints on local W.P.A. projects.
Practical metallurgy began with necklace beads and hammered ornaments and progressed, after a long interval, to knives and other weapons.
A long interval of one polarity may be followed by a short interval of opposite polarity.
He was minister of war in 1918 when, after a long interval, the army began to express its political views.
However, a future disturbance event may be forecast based on time series data (i.e., records of past occurrences) and the event's probability of occurrence across a long interval.
Early in the Cenozoic Era (about the past 65 million years), great outpourings of lava terminated a long interval of weathering and erosion.
A long interval allows operagoers the opportunity for picnic dinners on the extensive lawns or in one of the restaurants in the grounds.
There has been a long interval between Tracey Herd's second collection, Dead Redhead (2001), and the Scottish poet's welcome return with Not in This World, which has been shortlisted for next week's TS Eliot prize.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com