Example sentences of "[conj] make [art] difference " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ We were talking about 1968 and 1969 and the songs that changed the face of country music — Sunday Morning Coming Down , Boy Named Sue , Lay Lady Lay , Both Sides Now — someone said they were songs that made a difference . |
2 | Well I think my mother did a good job but my father was an alcoholic and that 's , that made a difference , not just to him but to the entire family and I think probably to my own children . |
3 | It is possible to imagine that for some people such consolation might make it easier to reconcile the two , and to wonder what it was that made the difference in Fraser 's case . |
4 | MARCO GABBIADINI , Sunderland 's England Under-21 forward , eloquently provided the dash and style that made the difference between these two sides , and it was his sharply taken goal that won this Littlewoods Cup replay . |
5 | Obviously it was n't the money that made the difference : what was important was the fact that the wealth opened up all sorts of possibilities to the lucky children that simply were not available to adopted children of poorer parents . |
6 | As both schools had a similar catchment area , he postulated that it was the schools themselves that made the difference between their pupils ' behaviour . |
7 | From this time onward the greater part of the effort is concentrated on the critical event that made the difference between a routine flight and a catastrophe . |
8 | Except he had lived with them-the wild free ones in the mountains and the wild caught ones up at San Carlos-about half his life and that made the difference . |
9 | and that made the difference I think , that probably made the difference |
10 | Cash only contributed one song to the second Highwaymen album , Highwayman 2 , a number called Songs that Make a Difference . |
11 | Details that make a difference |
12 | ‘ Our research so far suggests there are factors other than social deprivation and lifestyle that make a difference . |
13 | And , as always , it 's the little things that make the difference . |
14 | It 's these that make the difference . ’ |
15 | He says he 's got loss of memory , without a stroke , I have that as well , so that makes no difference . |
16 | You think that makes a difference , do you ? |
17 | But I mean that makes a difference Ann does n't it ? |
18 | Well that makes a difference , solid floor . |
19 | Like pasta , it is what you put on it that makes the difference . |
20 | Someone who thought there must be one thing that makes the difference might say it was an impression of familiarity . |
21 | As with all similar games it is the strategy you develop that makes the difference . |
22 | To recall Vaitsos ' point , it is not the foreignness of the firm that makes the difference but the foreignness of the product and its technology , what can be called its transnationality within the global capitalist system . |
23 | ‘ It is a command of idioms that makes the difference . |
24 | Before deciding to stock any wine , Winemark look extensively at the quality and reliability of the winery , but when it comes down to it , it 's the taste that makes the difference . |
25 | That 's the kind of thing that will get to you and make a difference in eight months of being in a popular band with a lot of money . |
26 | Mrs Davidson , of Stirling , said that so many people had contacted them that the association 's annual meeting had decided the only way to raise its profile and make a difference for patients was to set up a body covering Scotland as a whole . |
27 | Being able to return to William in the evenings brought back a sense of reality and made a difference to the whole trip . |
28 | Then war broke out in 1939 and made a difference , as it always does . |
29 | While they were an exceptionally well-balanced side , it was their superior bowling that stood out and made the difference between them and England . |
30 | The Davenports ’ second cellar in Mary Barton , though described as a ‘ back apartment ’ , and making a difference in the rent of threepence , is fit for neither with its floor of evil-smelling mud and its grating through which drop ‘ the moisture from pigsties , and worse abominations ’ . |