Example sentences of "[adv] make for a " in BNC.

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1 Hand-beating an aluminium panel does not necessarily make for a better car , confers no empirically measurable added value : nonetheless , it is the hand-wroughtness of Aston Martins that make otherwise sensible men write out cheques for £120,000 .
2 d ) any other Question necessary for the disposal of the business to be concluded ; and on a Motion so made for a new Clause or a new Schedule , the Chairman or Mr. Speaker shall put only the Question that the Clause or Schedule be added to the Bill .
3 Needless to say , this attitude did not make for a good marriage .
4 If workers are given jobs for life or if their wages are linked to age and seniority does this not make for a much less flexible labour market ?
5 This has not made for a smoothly running society , whose members all feel part of a common enterprise .
6 But man is not made for a solitary , self-sufficient existence .
7 No , they 're not made for a tall man er , you know my
8 The conventions , or unwritten rules , of the constitution were seen as of crucial significance since they secured " in a roundabout way what is called abroad the " sovereignty of the people " " thus making for a governmental system in which " the will of the electors shall by regular and constitutional means always in the end assert itself as the predominant influence in the country " .
9 It should be said , incidentally , that the remastering of the original 78s has , without affecting the overall frequency range , virtually eliminated their surface noise and produced remarkably quiet backgrounds : the only exception is the Prokofiev sonata ( which Horowitz introduced the USA ) , where the 1945 recording ( the earliest here ) is also more resonant and in which , just occasionally , a little to much pedal is used : the tremendous drive of his rhythm nevertheless makes for a compelling performance .
10 It always made for a grand fightfinisher .
11 But such acknowledgements of the ‘ other ’ gender usually make for a fuller , more rounded , heterosexual identity .
12 Okay , one or two of them are a little contrived , but they still make for a cracking package — all in one load too !
13 Of course the addition of a stereo processor would require a slightly bigger case but would still make for a manageable little rig .
14 Too heavy And then there 's Vera and Jack Duckworth their barmy battles always make for a Punch and Judy-styled double act .
15 Larger family size alone usually made for a very different situation from that of a grandchild brought up alone by a grandparent today .
16 Her crown , in some respects the most resplendent , proved in fact to be the last ever made for a Russian ruler .
17 A call was also made for a terrorist offensive .
18 Good bonding with reliable adhesives also makes for a good leak-free join .
19 How it all works out makes for a highly entertaining come-uppance of look-downers-on-others .
20 And , therefore , the argument is of people whose backs are pinned to the wall before they 're questioned as it were , and that does n't make for a sober and calm discussion , especially as there is some doubt , I suspect , in the mind of ministers , but certainly in the mind of many people in the Conservative Party , about whether these great absolutes , this wall against which ministers and departments are nailed , really need exist in quite the form it 's being constructed or whether the whole issue could n't be handled in a rather more sensitive and relaxed way .
21 In an era of fast food , subsistence incomes do n't make for a culinary culture .
22 The enormous contribution made throughout history — particularly in the arts — to society by homosexuals should surely make for a more tolerant and sympathetic understanding than to refer with such scorn to Wilde 's ‘ abnormal and filthy practises ’ .
23 The combination of malted wheat and the type of yeasts used by this region 's brewers can sometimes make for a spicy , clove-like character .
24 This sumptuous bauble , appropriately named the Tor Abbey Jewel , was doubtless made for a wealthy patron .
25 He reckoned that he would by then have far outflanked any cordon thrown up by his enemies , and could safely make for a phone .
26 Payment was never made for a vessel taken from its owner for royal service ; nor was compensation for loss of a ship , or even damage to its equipment , normally given .
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