Example sentences of "have make [pos pn] [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 However , since then their oil prices have increased and the strength of the US dollar has made their exports to the UK less competitive .
2 Government legislation for futher and higher education has made its mark in the form of implementation of the Further and Higher Education Act 1992 ( and associated legislation in Scotland and Wales ) .
3 It has made its way into the whisky business in the past three years by re-opening the Littlemill and Glen Scotia malt distilleries in Bowling and Campbeltown .
4 This is the more remarkable since by this time , its mother may have already given birth to another tiny baby that has made its way to the pouch and is fastened on to a teat imbibing milk of a quite different composition .
5 Labour 's new Scottish spokesman George Robertson has made his debut in the Commons by calling Scottish Secretary Ian Lang a pick pocket .
6 Labour 's new Scottish spokesman George Robertson has made his debut in the Commons by calling Scottish Secretary Ian Lang a pick pocket .
7 The effect of section 87 is to ensure that a qualified member of the tenant 's family who has made his home with the tenant shall not lose his home when the tenant dies but shall succeed to that home and to the secure tenancy which protected both the tenant and the successor while the tenant was alive and which shall continue to protect the successor after the death of the tenant .
8 The local authority will know whether if they let the council house to the tenant the house will also be occupied by a potential successor who has made his home with the tenant .
9 Thus speaks a man who has made his reputation in the pop genre .
10 ‘ In the last few minutes one of the party of missing students — ’ Kath let out her breath on a gust ‘ — has made his way to the surface , and he has told us that there are still two men trapped below here , ’ he announced in the earnest voice of sepulchral doom so favoured by reporters at the scene of an incident .
11 But man also has made his mark in the many ancient monuments , castles and churches that dot the countryside and small villages .
12 But plainly a man who has made his mark in the world , if he is already being sent for .
13 I wish to move an amendment which is erm , that we defer any decision on this until the property , the director of property services has made his report to the property sub- committee on the erm , future , stroke to the organisation , which is th , the subject of his next report to property sub- committee .
14 Asserting this , however , as cold legal doctrine may well fail to convince the doctor who has to make his decision in the real world and must weigh all the arguments advanced above .
15 Perhaps the old gods had been listening , when she 'd made her wish at the Trevi Fountain .
16 Having made their name as the most mischievous men in pop , their audience watched uneasily as Madness turned down the corners of their mouths .
17 All of them had been trained by the School from the age of eight or nine , eight having made their debut at the Winter Gardens at Blackpool .
18 Having made his way into the main draw via six rounds in the preliminary and qualifying competitions , he fell just short of a major upset in the first round proper .
19 With victory over the Racers , Cleveland Bombers would have made their way to the final ahead of the Scottish team .
20 ‘ She must have made her way to the East End to get to a phone box , ’ came the voice of Control .
21 The book is highly priced despite Bass 's sponsorship ( cash which must have made its way into the pockets of publisher and author ) .
22 I am sure O'Grady would have made his mark on the Centre Court of Wimbledon .
23 She rose from the chair , muttering to herself , ‘ Oh dear ! ’ because she knew she would have to make her way to the closet at the far end of the house .
24 They are beyond the visible spectrum but we do not have to make our observations with the naked eye and there are ways in which y-rays can be detected to form an image pattern .
25 ‘ I shall have to make my encounter with the captain look like an accident .
26 The ‘ Lancashire ’ coffin appears not to have made its début until the second quarter of the nineteenth century .
27 When you 've made your gifts to the various museums , you have given them with the stipulation that none of the works of art may ever be sold .
28 To wait for their enemy , the ordinary people of Famagusta had made their way to the heart of the city , where the Cathedral soared like a vast triangled reliquary , flanked by princely buildings and faced , across the piazza , by the handsome , doorless shell of the Palace .
29 Certainly these two had made their mark on the ever-widening fields of botany and horticulture when John Bartram wrote his first letter to Philip Miller on 20 April 1755 :
30 And the records at St Albans and Stamford show that these permanent buildings had made their appearance by the early fourteenth century .
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