Example sentences of "[noun] has made a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | When we return to the apartment , Maria has made a full confession and is asking Glass to help Leonard out of Berlin . |
2 | Mr Haszeldine has made a formal complaint to the ward councillors , saying the rats are coming from the depot because it is not kept clean . |
3 | Already the computer has made a significant contribution to the processing of much of the routine data generated by office staff . |
4 | Ian has made a better recovery than we dared hope , but it is still important that we do not take his fitness for granted . |
5 | There was a hint that this was a short term strategy , Mao at the seventh national congress in April nineteen forty five argued the C C P has made a major concession to land to the tiller . |
6 | The company , which is now owned by British Aerospace has made a spectacular recovery from the heavy losses of the mid-eighties to announce pre-tax profits of sixty five million pounds last year . |
7 | Now VW has made a strong comeback with its 1,588cc diesel for the Golf 40 years later . |
8 | Mr Kelly has made a formal complaint against the police and is to lodge one against the ambulance service . |
9 | I think Leonora Stem has made a tentative identification with a young Mr Thomas Hearst of Richmond who liked to come and play the oboe with the ladies . |
10 | The US company backed with British money has made a hasty deal to put its much-publicised camera on general sale in Britain after Easter . |
11 | Each of these three groups has made a first report at the time this Chapter was written . |
12 | LIVERPOOL 'S under-11 side has made a mixed start to the schools cricket season . |
13 | The advent of the private car has made a greater percentage of the population mobile , we can reach many different areas today by private car . |
14 | While their forwards were outplayed , though Andy Macdonald won the occasional good lineout ball , Heriot 's competed gamely and the arrival of young Lawrie has made a huge difference to their back play , and especially to centres Stoddart and McRobbie , who appear much more confident than earlier in the season . |
15 | Japanese industry has made a real effort to reduce energy use and particularly to cut oil consumption . |
16 | The sofa bed or studio couch has made a great difference to one-room living . |
17 | President Ishaq has made a dignified statement about his enthusiasm for upholding the constitution . |
18 | Already the rosy periwinkle from Madagascar has made a major contribution to curing childhood leukaemia and other blood cancers . |
19 | The new development has attracted a £2and1/4 ; million grant from the department of trade and industry ; a regional spokesman says foreign investment has made a huge impact on Telford . |
20 | This is not to deny that Volvo has made a significant innovation in work organisation and production technology , but it is one evolutionary step and not a revolution . |
21 | A senior legal figure has made a strong attack on Government policy towards Scotland 's justice system . |
22 | Bomb damage at the Dublin Road offices has made a serious dent in plans for Oxfam Week ( September 25-October 3 ) . |
23 | The outcome of the research is embodied in a thesis written by the candidate , and the doctorate is awarded if the thesis is of sufficient standard and it is judged that the research has made a definite contribution to knowledge . |
24 | Whatever the rights and wrongs of a sad situation , the fact remains that the club has made a dreadful start this season — winning only four of their first 13 games . |
25 | Fredric Jameson has made a vigorous statement of this difficulty : |
26 | Your children will inherit a world in which Basil 's influence has made a great contribution . |
27 | This work has made a great contribution to our understanding of the subject , although the structural diversity of port wine stains confounds the best attempts at mathematical modelling and there is no substitute for good clinical assessments and comparisons of different laser systems . |
28 | Christopher Ricks , trailing his coat in the wake of the MacCabe Affair , claimed that the critic should have ‘ principles ’ rather than ‘ theory ’ , while Stanley Fish has made a comparable distinction between ‘ theory , ’ and ‘ belief ’ : ‘ A theory is a special achievement of consciousness ; a belief is a prerequisite for being conscious at all . |
29 | Mary Havern , from Newry , races in her third world trophy event while newcomer Anne Sandford has made a superb transition from the world of cycling to top class fell running . |
30 | Mary Havern , from Newry , races in her third world trophy event while newcomer Anne Sandford has made a superb transition from the world of cycling to top class fell running . |