How to Use at a stretch in a Sentence

at a stretch

idiom
  • Forecasters are looking at a stretch of warm and dry weather moving into next week.
    oregonlive, 19 July 2023
  • For miles at a stretch the chimneys of the two power plants are visible against the horizon.
    Forbes Wealth Team, Forbes, 26 Jan. 2023
  • The heatwaves lasted for anywhere from five to nearly 200 days at a stretch.
    Roni Dengler, Discover Magazine, 12 Mar. 2019
  • Both the Crimson Tide and the Volunteers have gone many years at a stretch without losing to the other.
    Creg Stephenson | Cstephenson@al.com, al, 12 Oct. 2022
  • But don't worry if your baby sleeps for only 30 minutes at a stretch or seems nowhere close to sleeping through the night.
    Parents Editors, Parents, 11 June 2023
  • But don't worry if your baby sleeps for only 30 minutes at a stretch or seems nowhere close to sleeping through the night.
    Parents Editors, Parents, 11 June 2023
  • The two used primitive equipment in the late 1960s to record the sounds of humpback whales, which sometimes sing their eerie, complex songs for longer than a half-hour at a stretch.
    Patrick Whittle, ajc, 14 June 2023
  • The terrain is so mountainous and remote that no roads interrupt the narrow ribbons of beach for up to 25 miles at a stretch.
    Ryan Fonseca, Los Angeles Times, 15 May 2023
  • My wife travels a lot for work, jetting off to cover fashion shows for several weeks at a stretch at least twice a year.
    Los Angeles Times, 3 Mar. 2023
  • But the recent shortage of home-care nurses has forced the couple, who live in Queens, to handle longer and longer periods on their own — as many as 36 hours at a stretch.
    New York Times, 4 June 2021
  • But these stays are punctuated by time with her parents, a few weeks or months at a stretch, miserable.
    Alex Mar, Rolling Stone, 25 Mar. 2023
  • Instead, the company is asking that teams come into the office for one week at a stretch, usually once a month.
    Jon Chesto, BostonGlobe.com, 15 Feb. 2023
  • To be blunt, the USS Ford has yet to demonstrate the ability to operate at sea—uninterrupted and without a port call—for more than 35 days at a stretch.
    Craig Hooper, Forbes, 7 Mar. 2023
  • The ability of self-driving car software to steer the vehicle within a highway lane is great, but being able to do so, even for thousands of miles at a stretch, isn’t enough.
    Matt McFarland, CNN, 1 Nov. 2022
  • The standard explanation is that the behavior developed as a response to their nomadic lifestyle on the Plains, which left no time to remain in one place for weeks at a stretch.
    Val Cunningham Special To The Star Tribune, Star Tribune, 6 July 2021
  • To limit travel, minor-league schedules have been constructed around six-game series against one opponent at a stretch.
    Marc Bona, cleveland, 8 Apr. 2021
  • On the other side of Lyman, at a stretch of the road that passes through a thick pine forest, the twisted remains of seven Russian vehicles testified to a recent Ukrainian ambush.
    Yaroslav Trofimov, WSJ, 2 Oct. 2022
  • Also, there is very little research on more extreme forms of fasting, such as plans that involve going without calories for several days at a stretch.
    Markham Heid, Time, 23 Sep. 2022
  • Back at home, Megan continued to meditate, often for hours at a stretch, oscillating between lethargy and panic.
    David Kortava, Harper's Magazine, 16 Mar. 2021
  • Running these pumps for 10 hours at a stretch has revealed nylon fibers and other microplastics distributed throughout the water column below the South Atlantic subtropical gyre.
    New York Times, 3 Apr. 2022
  • The new device can record high-resolution videos for two days at a stretch, capturing blood vessels and hearts laboring during exercise or stomachs expanding and shrinking as test subjects gulp juice and then digest it.
    Sophie Bushwick, Scientific American, 29 July 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'at a stretch.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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