Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] make up the [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He said he had bumped into Shildon on Monday evening and urged him into a pub , taking the opportunity to make up the quarrel begun on Friday .
2 That means either taxpayers or consumers will have to cough up the cash to make up the difference between expensive British coal and cheaper foreign coal .
3 But there is nothing to support the theory that the crew made up the story , and no apparent motive for them to do so .
4 A few letters and edited sections of four interviews with the artist make up the rest of the volume which has some interesting illustrations reproducing photographs of the artist and friends .
5 The preserved GMP can sometimes fall short of what you would have had from SERPS , and in these cases the state makes up the difference .
6 If his employer 's scheme has ‘ contracted out ’ , they must pay you half his guaranteed minimum pension , and the state makes up the difference .
7 It follows therefore that the trustees can make a claim on the employer to make up the deficiency and claim a share in the company 's assets if the employer goes into liquidation .
8 It is possible to cut a more readily available 86/88 inch Series One roof and fit a new piece of aluminium to the middle to make up the difference , but this is not really a perfect solution .
9 It was the veil that told it was not the garden , then the hat that went to race-meetings and the dressing-case made up the rest of the story : Maman was going away .
10 Accepting then that the material making up the mantle can behave as a viscous liquid , this raises an interesting possibility .
11 ‘ Historically , people have looked to Europe as a place to make up the profit margins they had to give away in the States , ’ Apple spokesperson Frank O'Mahoney admitted to me immediately before launching into a lengthy explanation of how computer prices in Europe are now tumbling to less obscene levels .
12 He arranged bridging-loans and a mortgage to make up the price of the tall house with the basement into which she had decided he should move as a lodger , abandoning his awful little bed-sit in Chepstow Road .
13 The players with the required letters then form a line to make up the word as fast as they can , and the team which does it the quickest gets a point .
  Next page