Example sentences of "[conj] make [adv] [adj] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Other residents are reassured or made more anxious by the degree of care surrounding the deaths in the home .
2 That was if I ever got to the bottom of the steps that make up one of the island 's most spectacular walks .
3 It 's the flashiness that makes so many of the British films of the mid-1960s almost unwatchable today .
4 Precisely for that reason , it is urgently necessary to consolidate the present and make definitively sure of the future .
5 Only this information is transferred between sites and made directly available to the designer , in order to resolve his design problem .
6 This is an important consideration which bears directly on the current debate as to whether the Convention should be incorporated into British law and made directly enforceable within the jurisdiction .
7 The planning process has been delayed and made more expensive by the need for constant negotiations between authorities responsible for two separate parts of a process which was intended in the Town and County Planning Acts of 1968 and 1971 to be fully integrated .
8 Hence the participation of women in the labour market was both ‘ allowed ’ by the concerns with economic growth and made more possible by the improved educational opportunities offered to women .
9 The sentimental side , although well presented by a fine ballad like ‘ Make the Man Love Me ’ , is both overshadowed and made more sugary by the comic element of Cisssie , the heroine 's sister , with her string of ‘ husbands ’ all called Harry and her rosy outlook .
10 There is good evidence to show that the Mental Health Act is used disproportionately against black people and other disadvantaged groups , and this element of social control that is invested in psychiatric practice is likely to be further strengthened and made more pervasive by the introduction of community supervision orders .
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