Example sentences of "[be] made [art] " in BNC.

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1 Mr Randall said : ‘ In general terms , we do see room for hacking to be made a criminal offence . ’
2 But to be made a deacon was for the first time to profess before a multitude that the soul undertook the cause of God in a special ministry , and for the first time to feel sent to an apostolic work .
3 The plan calls for Berlin to be made a centre for international conferences and youth exchanges and for improving air traffic to the city .
4 With the introduction of the new conveyancing scheme the legal process of acquiring a home should be made a lot easier .
5 She could not bind herself personally , with the result that she could not be made a bankrupt , unless she was carrying on a trade .
6 ‘ She let herself be made a fool of .
7 ‘ I think it can be made a kind of elective institution .
8 It had to be made a crusade , and so it was .
9 Lynda Chalker , Overseas Development Minister , who lost her Wallasey seat , is to be made a baroness and retains her post .
10 Domestic affairs shall be made a criminal offence .
11 Our working relationship , I am sure , would be made a great deal easier . ’
12 She was the first woman sculptor , and only deaf woman , to be made a member of any Royal Academy in the British Isles .
13 If cycling is to be made a safer and more attractive mode of transport , it is , as Hudson 's classic book has advocated , essential that planning principles are established and followed .
14 The publication of a statement of compliance with the code , reviewed by the auditors so far as compliance can be objectively verified , is to be made a listing requirement by the Stock Exchange .
15 About a year before I left it was all discussed when I would be made a partner along with one or two other people who were being brought through .
16 We might speculate that we need to teach the next generation the principles of establishing the Lady of the Hearth , the ways in which an environment can be made a happy , welcoming place .
17 Janice was to be made a scapegoat .
18 The mummified corpses , which Sadat decreed should not be made a spectacle of , include those of Seti I , Segnere III and Ramses II .
19 ‘ … considered that a casual with a skilled trade may have his efficiency seriously impaired by being required to break stones and may , in order to avoid this task , feel compelled to sleep out or to commit some other offence against the law ; that it is impossible to expect the officer in charge of a casual ward to discriminate between men for whom the task would or would not be suitable , and that this would lay him open to accusations of favouritism or vindictiveness ; that the task could rarely be made a profitable one , and is repugnant to the class of workers most liable to unemployment , being looked upon by them as having penal associations and as entirely deterrent . ’ )
20 That the archbishop of the prestigious see of Milan , graced by St Ambrose and St Charles Borromeo , should not be made a cardinal looked like a deliberate snub .
21 In the autumn of 1751 , for example , Alexander Hume Campbell , the brother of the Earl of Marchmont , and member of parliament for Berwickshire , wrote to Lord Anson , the First Lord of the Admiralty , telling him how important it was to his interest that Lieutenant James Home should be made a post-captain , and reminding Lord Anson that this favour had already been promised to Lord Marchmont during a conversation in the House of Lords .
22 If special arrangements have to be made a note in the diary will remind the duty manager when VIPs or CIPs are due to arrive .
23 Douglas — to be made a Depot and have a Life Boat , with a Mortar and other apparatus .
24 He moved in against his young brother , slowly this time , determined not to be made a fool of twice .
25 The one can not be made a substitute for the other ; indeed , any failure in right conduct inevitably brings about a downfall in right beliefs .
26 For many there was a conviction that the post-war world must be made a better place , a view that recurred regularly over the next twenty years .
27 None the less , some statements by members of the Association reveal that the effacement required by this procedure was no more than a tactical ploy , since one of the dominant assumptions of moral education was " that morality was to be made a conscious aim of the teacher , but concealed from the pupils , who were to imbibe the influence from literature as habit or experience " .
28 Additionally , assuming we are interested in social welfare , the manager 's pay should be made a function of that , if possible .
29 As regards the police , should the publication of racist statements like the unofficial communique be made a disciplinary offence , or would this merely strengthen rank-and-file resistance to the implementation of antiracist policies within the force ?
30 There are cases not in any way in doubt on this appeal which establish the general proposition that a foetus enjoys , while still a foetus , no independent legal personality — a foetus can not , while a foetus , sue and can not be made a ward of court : see Paton v. British Pregnancy Advisory Service Trustees [ 1979 ] Q.B .
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