[
UK
/lˈɒŋtaɪm/
]
[ US /ˈɫɔŋˌtaɪm/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɔŋˌtaɪm/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
having existed or persisted or continued in a particular role or state for a long time
a longtime friend
How To Use longtime In A Sentence
- Redford said his longtime friendship with network anchor Tom Brokaw helped him understand the broadcast news environment.
- Meanwhile, what I think as a longtime recreational striper angler is this: (1) Make stripers gamefish coast-wide with no commercial fishing or sale of wild stripers at all. Uncategorized Blog Posts
- Ben Bradlee, the longtime Washington Post editor, is a vice president at the newspaper and former Washington bureau chief of NEWSWEEK.
- This is where longtime friendships are fostered, where online acquaintances gather in meatspace, where rivalries and romances blossom. 7 Reasons to Attend Worldcon
- His longtime friends describe his populist style as no political gimmick.
- Loach's social-realist drama, written by his longtime collaborator Paul Laverty, is a distinctive, piercingly serious vision.
- Bona fides: Longtime activist for Darfur who just returned from a week-long trip in the southern half of the country and briefed President Obama at a White House meeting and Sen. Richard Lugar on Capitol Hill earlier in the day. Celebvocate: George Clooney reps for Darfur
- With a simple ethos of delivering a bill reflecting the very best in terms of both talent and reputation, headliners include the grandpapa of French house music François Kevorkian, playing his Deep Space set for the first and only time in the UK this year, alongside his longtime collaborator and sometime resident at legendary NYC fun factory Loft, Danny Krivit. Clubs picks of the week
- After each fight, he calls his longtime girlfriend, Britain's Biggest Loser Fights
- All the clichés of the form are on display in ‘Plague in the Heartland,’ worn down every bit as smooth as the teeth of a longtime meth fiend.