Example sentences of "made a [adj] effort " in BNC.
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1 | Japanese industry has made a real effort to reduce energy use and particularly to cut oil consumption . |
2 | During the last five months he has made a strenuous effort to get to know the area and the residents of this constituency of contrasts . |
3 | ‘ The United Cricket Board and politicians have made a tremendous effort to bring fairness into our system , and it was great that we were being supported by everybody . ’ |
4 | He claims that after his departure no one seems to have made a serious effort to keep workers informed on the dangers of the process , and especially of the need to cool it . |
5 | She has also made a concerted effort to improve her knowledge . |
6 | In line with the recent emphasis on leisure in our society , libraries have made a concerted effort to attract young people . |
7 | People were slow to come out and if these people had made a concerted effort in the beginning it might have been different ’ . |
8 | We 've made a concerted effort in recent years to make the articles in our association magazine , Business Credit , relevant to the day-to-day problems credit and financial managers face , and to present the latest techniques and applications . |
9 | De Gaulle 's lucidity on this point was eventually justified by events , but not before the Americans had made a concerted effort to eliminate him as a political force . |
10 | The South African Area continues to work hard in support of both the Association and the RAF Benevolent Fund , and has made a special effort this year , the 50th Anniversary of the Battle of Britain . |
11 | Mr Major has made a special effort to patch up relations with Germany . |
12 | In the poor north-eastern part of Brazil infant mortality went up by 20 per cent between 1982 and 1984 , even though the Brazilian government had made a special effort to establish more health-care facilities during the same period . |
13 | The regulators have made a big effort to prevent KKR 's involvement openly breaching the famous walls between banking and commerce . |
14 | An occasional treat or privilege for a child who has made a big effort to master a new skill or managed to give up a bad habit hardly comes into that category . |
15 | When jury selection commenced on Sept. 5 , the defence vainly made a last-minute effort to get the trial dismissed , alleging government breach of ethics because it had just learned that Noriega 's former lawyer , Raymond Takiff , who had advised him to surrender to US authorities in January 1990 , was at the time working secretly for federal authorities . |
16 | The company had not made a proper effort to place her in a comparable position in another store . |
17 | There was no general ruling on what type of person was best able to carry out these tasks but the two most common groups were : ( a ) the older wife who had a great deal of experience , and ( b ) the young wife who had made a determined effort to acquire as much knowledge and skill as possible . |
18 | So since 1979 the Conservatives have made a determined effort to curtail local expenditure . |
19 | We 've made a determined effort to try to get more er drug addicts to come forward , to accept treatment and so on . |
20 | It is always so annoying when one has made a particular effort to check a point and something still goes wrong . |
21 | The YHA has also made a positive effort to accommodate disabled hostellers and welcomes enquiries from them . |
22 | Hence , during my time in post I have made a positive effort to spread the gospel of AI within at least the Engineering Branch . |
23 | The man made a sudden effort and the words tumbled out fast . |
24 | Just lately I have made a conscious effort to really look at the book . |
25 | Though the man and I have made a conscious effort not to follow the marked paths of our genders , this life , its setpieces , are clichés of gender in spite of our best intentions . |
26 | Donaldson side-stepped to avoid two solicitors in conversation , youngish men who seemed to have made a conscious effort to propel themselves into a facsimile of late middle-age . |