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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a long office" is grammatically correct but may not convey a clear meaning without context
You can use it when describing an office that has a considerable length or when referring to a lengthy period spent in an office setting. Example: "After spending a long office day, I was exhausted and ready to go home."
Exact(2)
Logan, a "60 Minutes" correspondent, is now 90 minutes late, but one gets the sense from Burkett's periodic updates ("she's just been held up, leaving soon") that a long office stint on a weekend is not out of the ordinary.
Due to the "miracle" of modern communications, you are able to join a long office conference call during which you must feign deference to authority figures who are much stupider than you.
Similar(58)
But movie studios, stung by a long box office slump, piracy, rising production costs and competition by snazzy home theaters, know they need to cut costs to be more profitable.
Pei's design placed the rigid shoebox at an angle to the surrounding street grid, connected at the north end to a long rectangular office building, and cut through the middle with an assortment of circles and cones.
The fire was believed to have started in a restaurant in the basement of the building, a block-long office complex, Sergeant Moscatello said.
They are strong international sellers, with a long box-office half-life for any sequels.
The siding is peeling from a long-empty office building at 133 West Main.
Gavin & Stacey is a love story about a couple who start a long-distance office romance before meeting each other.
The state's economic development arm bought a long-vacant office tower in Niagara Falls for $1 million then sold it to Mr. Paladino for $10 in 2002.
Sadly, a long-ago office fire, along with a brief closing in 1979, compromised both Keens's files and, I assumed, any chances I had of reclaiming my slow-burning birthright.
The tabloid's former newsdesk secretary, Frances Carman, was asked if she remembered a long-running office joke about "somebody who was slightly strange, a Walter Mitty character" who would call the newsdesk introducing himself as Mr Strawberry or Mr Lemon.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com