Example sentences of "[noun] [to-vb] it [adj] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The most celebrated attempt to explain it all by numbers was the so-called Phillips curve [ 1958 ] .
2 Under proposed University legislation , new graduates will automatically become members of the Graduates Association on receipt of their degrees , after which it is hoped that many will endeavour to create and foster the right conditions to make it attractive for graduates to want to belong and help make their membership worthwhile and rewarding .
3 A COMPLAINTS system is being set up by a local authority to make it easier for residents to complain about the service that the council offers .
4 Reality strikes home when the learner arrives on the ward to find it overcrowded with beds , chairs , trolleys and even patients .
5 He took his job very seriously and made me rewrite the book to make it understandable to nonscientists like himself .
6 The hearing was held in Dumbarton instead of Campbeltown to make it easier for relatives from England to attend .
7 The RYA also plans to restructure their training courses to make it easier for pupils to advance from beginner levels to racing proficiency .
8 He turned up for a remand hearing at Redbridge court covered in baby oil to make it difficult for warders to grab hold of him .
9 They and the school together planned ahead in order to make it possible for pupils to feel that they , too , knew themselves better .
10 Indeed , the more heroic you make your hero the more you will need moments of human weakness to make it easy for readers to have that sympathetic identification .
11 I know that he will lose no opportunity to make it clear to employers and workers in that industry how devastating the prospects for their jobs would be if the Labour party 's proposals were put into effect .
12 Hence it was important to reduce levels of grant to make it clearer to voters what services actually cost .
  Next page