Example sentences of "[noun] to make [conj] [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 They offer to the consumer the same broad range of musical production and use a similar range of criteria in choosing which specific recordings to make and distribute .
2 At a prompt date , a member 's matching open contracts for that date ( where he has not indicated an intention to make or take delivery of metal ) are automatically settled against one another by LCH and the resulting price differences are posted to his account .
3 It is the job of the record issuing companies to make and issue good recordings of music to the public who want those records : it is not the job of these companies to try to educate the public be delivering expensive and often long-winded lectures with their recordings .
4 Loss is also central to Bowlby 's theory , but the losses which are the basis of vulnerability are real and not imagined and centre on a person 's failure to make or maintain a stable and secure relationship with his parents early in childhood .
5 It is only when thus defined that Parliament ‘ has , under the English constitution , the right to make or unmake any law whatsoever ; and , further , that no person or body is recognised … as having the right to override or set aside the legislation of Parliament ’ .
6 The principle of Parliamentary sovereignty means neither more nor less than this , namely , that Parliament thus defined has , under the English constitution , the right to make or unmake any law whatever ; and , further , that no person or body is recognised by the law of England as having a right to override or set aside the legislation of Parliament .
7 Parliamentary sovereignty , he wrote , meant that Parliament had " the right to make or unmake any law whatever ; and , further , that no person or body is recognized by the law of England as having a right to override or set aside the legislation of Parliament . "
8 S & N bought the right to make and sell Nivea in Commonwealth countries for a minimal sum in 1950 .
9 But these campaigns have never been isolated from the fundamental issue of power , the issue of who rules our country , who has this right to make and unmake the law .
10 The flaw in this idea was that the Assembly was to have no executive powers and no powers to make or unmake ministers .
11 and at the request and cost of the Landlord to make or join with the Landlord in making such objections or representations against or in respect of any notice direction order or proposal as the Landlord shall reasonably deem expedient except where the Tenant reasonably considers that any such objections or representations are against its best interests or those of any undertenant
12 The children 's toy market is big business — worth £3 billion a year , it uses vast resources to make and package its products .
13 We want a society in which people have the power and resources to make and remake their own lives .
14 Although modern haymaking involves expensive , sophisticated machinery , it is still possible for a smallholder to make and store excellent hay with very modest tackle , and it is hay on which he is most likely to depend for the bulk of his winter keep .
15 Whereas domestic politics occur within a political system which includes a government to make and enforce laws , the international system is anarchic .
16 History , as we have mentioned , has been kind : the country has staved off invasion by its enemies , and the resources have been available for government to make and meet commitments in response to changing demands and expectations .
17 Because so many parents were asking her how they could help their children with reading , teacher and mother of three Barbara Geere wrote Seven Ways to Help Your Child With Reading ( Seven Ways Series , £1.95 ) , which sets out simply how to make a start , build up your child 's confidence , make reading fun ( with plenty of learning games to make or buy ) and , at the end , how to form letters .
18 The obligation to make or take delivery can be avoided by an offsetting purchase or sale before the settlement date , and normally only a small proportion of all contracts are settled by delivery .
19 Obligation to make and accept tender
20 The $10m trial of the wireless communications system based on very low-power , digital radio communications will involve personal handsets and microcellular technology to enable users to be immediately and constantly accessible — 1,000 trial participants will use the pocket phones to make and receive calls within the coverage area , on both home base stations and 500 or so public base stations in the downtown and other densely-populated or widely visited parts of Boise .
21 It was Colin Calderwood of all people who joined in the attack to make and take as good a goal as you 'll see anywhere .
22 A transaction or set of circumstances engineered by the target to make it unattractive to a bidder to make or proceed with an offer .
23 GET PUPILS TO MAKE OR INVENT SOMETHING … to measure turn … to measure time … to carry a certain weight .
24 GET PUPILS TO MAKE OR INVENT SOMETHING to measure turn .
25 Although the total press coverage of pop music increased dramatically over the last ten years , the quality has n't improved and the power of music papers to make and break an artist has greatly dissipated .
26 You , as beneficial owner , assign to Oxford University Press the copyright and all other intellectual property rights in respect of the product by the law in any part of the world , authorise Oxford University Press to make or cause to be made any alterations , adaptations and additions to the product , and waive your rights conferred by Chapter IV of Part I of the Copyright , Designs and Patents Act 1988 .
27 3.3 The Programmer authorises the Publisher to make and permit the making of alterations , adaptations and additions to the Program .
28 3.3 The Programmer authorises the Publisher to make and permit the making of alterations , adaptations and additions to the Program .
29 He may with good reason be regarded as the first of that long line of professional civil servants who did more than any others to make and destroy the medieval Church : they were professional administrators , equipped to forward the interests of government not by main force but by negotiation amidst the intricate issues of law and theology ; men of international standing , retaining the respect of their opponents , and not too hatefully or too personally involved in the cause which they were required to maintain .
30 Mr Bland said last night : ‘ Our scheme is designed to ensure that LWT is in a position to make and broadcast programmes at the weekend from 1993 onwards . ’
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