Example sentences of "make [pron] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | However , their low cost ( Notes retails at around £400 , WFWG at £149 ) and ease of implementation make them a viable proposition for the small company , and will probably result in their becoming much more influential in the long term . |
2 | The skills they possess make them a valued commodity which most organizations would be loath to lose and keen to gain . |
3 | Hirszowicz summarizes the specific features of communist bureaucracies which make them a new species of bureaucratic order as follows : |
4 | The key characteristics of each company which make them a good fit with the client should be identified . |
5 | The key characteristics of each company which make them a good fit with the client should be identified . |
6 | When object-oriented database systems become more widely available , there may be a number of application domains where their advantages make them a good choice . |
7 | Clearly the easily accessible position of the Malverns near big population centres make them a popular target for picnickers and day trippers , not to mention walkers . |
8 | Beyond this there is little agreement , and the women 's weekly magazines , for example , have argued strongly in recent years that their particular editorial qualities and high coverage of a female audience make them a superior medium even to TV for many products in , particularly , food and toiletry fields . |
9 | ‘ The lean-line droopiness of Michael Crawford and Oliver Reed 's big-drum bravado make them the best double act since Laurel and Hardy , ’ wrote Alexander Walker in the London Evening Standard . |
10 | No , you make them the same as us ! |
11 | not make them an enormous feature . |
12 | Come on make me a nice cup of tea . |
13 | Go and make me a nice cup of tea Mike ? |
14 | Make me a better job prospect . ’ |
15 | ‘ I 'll be interested if Newcastle make me a good offer , ’ said the 25-year-old Ghent striker . |
16 | Make me a whole man before I go out to take the field with Wales in my hands . |
17 | Pilot projects have already taken place in two other parts of England , but magistrates in Oxfordshire are confident alterations make theirs a fairer scheme . |
18 | I make you a good lasagne . ’ |
19 | ‘ I 'm going to tuck you in , then go downstairs and make you a hot drink . ’ |
20 | When you think of the work that the old grocer used to have to do you know , make you a three corner bag out of a bit of paper , to put a pennyworth of pepper in . |
21 | The trouble was that being a good club player , even being an outstanding club player , does not of itself make you a worthy international , and it was Waldron 's failure to recognise this of his own Neath players that contributed as much as anything to his downfall . |
22 | The evening will be semi-business anyway , so your qualifications make you the best candidate . ’ |
23 | She ought to get out of her wet clothes , have a hot bath , make herself a hot drink , only that seemed to require too much effort . |
24 | And when Mrs Amabel Dallam remembered to pay her for all those wedding chemises she might just take a few shillings to a certain bazaar in Leeds where she 'd heard good dress-lengths were to be had at bargain prices and make herself a new dress for Christmas . |
25 | Marco 's father realises that the quick wits developed in the London slums and the boy 's everyday , practical good sense make him a perfect companion ( aide-de-camp , as he likes to be designated ) for the quietly ardent , reflective Marco . |
26 | For this , Italian fanzines make him a perfect Italian boy ( ‘ Mamma is my true sweetheart ’ — Max Magazine ) . |
27 | ALTHOUGH the British government would deny ‘ grooming ’ a candidate from within the ranks of its Hong Kong civil service for the job of chief executive after transition in 1997 , it has given John Chan , 46 , a series of fast-track official posts which make him a credible contender for the job . |
28 | Francie Brady is The Butcher Boy of Patrick McCabe 's remarkable second novel ( Picador £14.99 ) , a child whose enquiring , ironical cast of mind and dire , small town Irish background ( his father has done his mother wrong , and she in turn is obsessed with the gloomy ditty from which the novel takes its title ) make him a fancied candidate for an early place in the reform school or the graveyard . |
29 | Make him a delicious cup of 99 tea , Brenda , it licks other bedtime drinks — and it 'll put an end to his night-time grinding ! |
30 | It would also , Owen thought , make him a less than perfect candidate for Khedive when a vacancy arose . |