Example sentences of "make [pron] [verb] at " in BNC.

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1 Now do welcome them , do make them feel at home , especially those of you who are new to the place you will know and remember what it 's like when you first come into a strange building that feels like home .
2 ‘ I think if I did that would make them look at me in a completely different way . ’
3 Peter does n't make me laugh at all .
4 He would make me look at pictures and then reproduce them with coloured pencils , or else ask me to rotate a figure mentally a certain number of degrees around a given perpendicular before attempting to redraw it .
5 All are welcome at The Barn on the last Thursday in every month from 7.30 pm to 9.30 pm where organisers Mrs. Eileen Slater and Mrs. Amy Rowland will make you feel at home .
6 Amsterdam certainly has it all with the city 's most enduring attraction being the Amsterdammers themselves who will instantly make you feel at home and help you enjoy this marvellous city to the full .
7 ‘ I thought it would make you feel at home , ’ said the gallery owner — untruthfully , I felt .
8 So Malcolm went down Club Row market and bought us a cat and the most ridiculously horrible food — tins of sardines and those disgusting tinned plum tomatoes they used to try and make you eat at school .
9 Strangely enough , the idea which occurred to her , in that first moment of its discovery , did n't make her feel at all afraid .
10 No one could make him stay at school .
11 This applied in particular to the Prior , Father Stephen Bedale , a man of huge stature and extrovert character , and the kind of man who , had he been a layman , might have given the poet a hearty slap on the back in the belief that this would make him feel at home .
12 Nicholas Soames , the aristocratically toned and booming Tory MP for Crawley , can still make him stumble at the despatch box by muttering ‘ Another G and T , Giovanni ’ .
13 ‘ And , Cadfael , even when the day comes , we will not make it known at chapter .
14 John Plamenatz announced enthusiastically that " the voice of the people is heard everlastingly " through the spokespersons of these organizations , and Robert Dahl believed in the 1950s that the United States possessed " a political system in which all the active and legitimate groups in the population can make themselves heard at some critical stage in the process of decision " .
15 Dame Edna Everage may make us laugh at prejudice , but are we smiling or laughing at ourselves ?
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