Example sentences of "makes [adj] [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 To obtain this type of information the unit makes extensive use of a very wide range of information sources and has direct access to an internal information service which is maintained within the corporate planning department .
2 A modern library makes extensive use of information technology and it is frequently the case that students are tentative in making full use of such technology or are unaware of the wide range of services available .
3 A modern library makes extensive use of information technology and it is frequently the case that students are tentative in making full use of such technology or are unaware of the wide range of services available .
4 ANY SCIENCE FICTION worth its salt makes extensive use of flat , wall-mounted TV .
5 By contrast , the OALD is more straightforward , uses whole sentences wherever possible , and makes extensive use of example sentences .
6 This makes extensive use of PCM-CIA technology and is based on the low-powered Intel 386SL chip .
7 The author makes extensive use of Wedgwood 's letters and memoranda and the book is a must for collectors of Wedgwood ware .
8 The project makes extensive use of quantitative methods and also analyses institutional and organisational changes .
9 The project makes extensive use of census data for 1961 , 1971 and 1981 , the OPCS 1% sample longitudinal survey 1971-81 and social survey research in selected areas of London .
10 Environmentalists have joined with racing enthusiasts and the Utah Film Commission , which makes extensive use of the flats , in an unusual alliance aimed at their preservation .
11 The IPE , for example , makes extensive use of EFPs ( exchange of futures for physicals ) .
12 It makes extensive use of CLI commands .
13 Britain at present makes little use of Indian software expertise .
14 For example , Lawrence makes little use of pronouns , conjunctions , and auxiliaries ; and whereas the preposition of occurs twenty-nine times ( out of 397 words in all ) in the Conrad passage , it occurs only seven times ( out of 377 words ) in this one .
15 It is difficult to relate the proposals in the review to prospects for services for elderly people , as although it is entitled ‘ Working for Patients ’ , the Review makes little mention of health care for individuals or particular client groups .
16 ‘ Such odd things determine why and when one makes that kind of decision .
17 As poet , Eliot makes devastating use of such an assumed uniformity .
18 Recreate a splendid Victorian Christmas atmosphere with this table setting , which makes striking use of colour — adding purple to traditional reds and greens .
19 One of the most remarkable features of language is the fact that it ‘ makes infinite use of finite resources ’ .
20 This makes informed discussion of foreign and domestic policy by the American people difficult .
21 The volcanic history of that event does not need restatement here , but the complexity of the stratal history makes this part of the column both the most confusing and the most controversial of all .
22 Interestingly , it is the semantic anomaly that probably makes this kind of joke far easier to translate from English into another language than the jokes which depend on sound-play or polysemy .
23 Primarily what makes this type of work unpopular is the ever-present danger that work of this sort will break the veneer of coldness , exposing them as emotionally involved , which is something they dislike because it is considered unprofessional .
24 This is what makes this type of exercise ( like jogging and cycling ) aerobic .
25 Modern computer architecture makes this type of instruction modification undesirable and , since the introduction of index registers , it has become unnecessary .
26 Once again , the intensity of contact spread over such a long time in the field makes this form of self-monitoring difficult to maintain , and there was also a general resistance from below to the management 's instruction .
27 This makes this form of reference atypical for two reasons : ( 1 ) the " expert " is a group of individuals rather than one individual ; and ( 2 ) the identity of the " expert " is known immediately , because every company must have auditors .
28 Once again the phenomenon that makes this sort of unemployment involuntary is the inability of workers and employers directly to lower the real-wage rate to w * ; .
29 What makes this pattern of dots different to those that can be produced by a scanner and page printer is that they vary in size .
30 If this occurs the chemical structure of the drug makes further growth of the DNA chain impossible , and so the copies of viral DNA would never be completed .
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