Example sentences of "have make a [adj] [noun] for " in BNC.
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1 | More recently , Edward Shorter has made a similar case for improvements in women 's health status generally as a pre-requisite to an active feminist movement . |
2 | Psion Plc has made a strong recovery for the year to December 31 due to a large increase in both international sales and sales of its Series 3 range of handheld computers to the retail sector . |
3 | But moving house has made a great difference for me . |
4 | Newcastle boss Kevin Keegan has made a renewed inquiry for Hughes , but Ferguson says : ‘ What 's the point in signing a striker to sell a striker ? |
5 | Wise Speke is quietly confident that Whessoe has made a good deal for its longer term development . |
6 | Unfortunately the service may come to late for a childless woman who has made a desperate plea for an egg donor . |
7 | Mr. Robert Hughes : My Hon. Friend the Member for Cunninghame , North ( Mr. Wilson ) has made a compelling case for the amendments , and I wish only to reinforce one or two of his points . |
8 | Since then , the hon. Member for Clydebank and Milngavie ( Mr. Worthington ) has made a persuasive case for including such provisions in the Bill . |
9 | Germany has a target of a 30 per cent reduction by 2005 , France recommends cuts of up to 50 per cent by 2030 , Italy has made a parliamentary resolution for 20 per cent cuts by 2005 and Australia also is aiming for 20 per cent cuts by 2005 . |
10 | Though not used by homoeopathic pharmacies in this country for potencies below the 1M , it is used commercially in Belgium for all potencies , and is also used when a practitioner has to make a specific potency for a particular patient , such as a potency of chloroform for a case of chloroform allergy . |
11 | DES WALKER knows he has to make a quick impression for his new club , Sampdoria . |
12 | Unfortunately they are not usually repeatable , so having made a superb jumper for your mother , you will probably be unable to make one for yourself . |
13 | Eddie Gray is genuinely regarded by some clever football people to have been every bit as good as best , and could have made a similar name for himself had he not been dogged by injury . |
14 | She would have made a good wife for a T'ang , let alone a man like Sung . |
15 | This village blacksmith was not a ‘ mighty man ’ at all ; in fact , he was much smaller than Micky , his twelve-year-old son , who would have made a good model for the Fat Boy in the Pickwick Papers . |
16 | The bride was an attractive and lively young woman who under normal circumstances would have made a sympathetic wife for an energetic and ambitious young man . |
17 | But Prestel does seem to have made a convincing case for its role in educational computing . |
18 | ‘ From this trading account , you would expect the business as a whole to have made a thumping loss for the year … |
19 | ‘ If you 've made a new life for yourself , what are you doing here ? ’ she challenged . |
20 | The Swedish Prime Minister , Ingvar Carlsson , had made a personal appeal for clemency to Saddam Hussein . |
21 | She had made a new life for herself now in London , a better , much more successful life than Dublin . |
22 | It was also evident that those departments which had made a strong case for improved resourcing had gained from the appraisal . |
23 | Long before we arrived , Herr Wendling had made a great reputation for him and has now introduced him to all his friends . |
24 | Azerbaijan had made a formal request for recognition on Nov. 5 , following an unofficial visit to Turkey by Prime Minister Gasan Gasanov on Nov. 3-4 , when he held talks with Turkish leaders . |
25 | What the GLC were hoping to do with London 's transport system now looks quite farsighted , and the learned judge 's remark that Ken Livingstone ‘ had made a naked grasp for power that must not be allowed ’ just silly . |
26 | On another occasion , things did not go so well , ‘ for at each corner of each box they [ rats ] had made a proper hole for access and in each box was a warm nest of straw and the leaves and stalks of the shrubs . |
27 | Her name was Mrs Tobias and Hugh had met her when he handled her divorce case , successfully , because Mr Tobias had made a determined rush for freedom , scattering alimony lavishly as he went . |
28 | But London disliked the condition , which Schuman had made a non-negotiable basis for talks on his Plan , that all member states must accept the principle of supranational co-operation . |
29 | He considered this for a short time and concluded that he had to make a public stand for those things which he believed . |
30 | NOTE : STUDENTS WHO HAVE MADE A SUCCESSFUL APPLICATION FOR A DISCRETIONARY AWARD e.g. ACCEPTANCE FOR THE BTEC HNC ENGINEERING ( Electronics and Communications ) , CERTIFICATE IN FOUNDATION STUDIES IN ART AND DESIGN , OR FOR POSTGRADUATE COURSES , MUST BRING A LETTER OF AUTHORITY FROM THE GRANT AWARDING BODY . |