Example sentences of "[be] make [art] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | It may motivate readers to dig more deeply or may be make a practical contribution to death education in the local schools . |
2 | ‘ But before Derry can be made a major European city it 's important that the people of that place are proud of themselves and their city and know what they want for the city . ’ |
3 | For many there was a conviction that the post-war world must be made a better place , a view that recurred regularly over the next twenty years . |
4 | If cycling is to be made a safer and more attractive mode of transport , it is , as Hudson 's classic book has advocated , essential that planning principles are established and followed . |
5 | Mr Randall said : ‘ In general terms , we do see room for hacking to be made a criminal offence . ’ |
6 | Domestic affairs shall be made a criminal offence . |
7 | ‘ … considered that a casual with a skilled trade may have his efficiency seriously impaired by being required to break stones and may , in order to avoid this task , feel compelled to sleep out or to commit some other offence against the law ; that it is impossible to expect the officer in charge of a casual ward to discriminate between men for whom the task would or would not be suitable , and that this would lay him open to accusations of favouritism or vindictiveness ; that the task could rarely be made a profitable one , and is repugnant to the class of workers most liable to unemployment , being looked upon by them as having penal associations and as entirely deterrent . ’ ) |
8 | Our working relationship , I am sure , would be made a great deal easier . ’ |
9 | As my hon. Friend knows , our fundamental position on reform is that the intervention system must be made a great deal less attractive . |
10 | It will be made a London-based company , Blue Heaven Productions , for the ITV network . |
11 | As regards the police , should the publication of racist statements like the unofficial communique be made a disciplinary offence , or would this merely strengthen rank-and-file resistance to the implementation of antiracist policies within the force ? |
12 | None the less , some statements by members of the Association reveal that the effacement required by this procedure was no more than a tactical ploy , since one of the dominant assumptions of moral education was " that morality was to be made a conscious aim of the teacher , but concealed from the pupils , who were to imbibe the influence from literature as habit or experience " . |
13 | Similarly , a requirement that the expert observe the rules of natural justice could be made a contractual obligation . |
14 | We might speculate that we need to teach the next generation the principles of establishing the Lady of the Hearth , the ways in which an environment can be made a happy , welcoming place . |
15 | The protesters demanded that Islamic law or sharia be made the sole source of legislation . |
16 | If no further contact can be made the general practitioner should be informed . |
17 | If the right hemisphere is merely slower than the left on this task , then the more matches that have to be made the greater the relative right hemispheric disadvantage should be . |
18 | ‘ She told me she and Mellor had long chats about politics , and that it had been suggested by the Prime Minister that at the end of the year Mellor would be made the new Party chairman . ’ |
19 | That can mean only that UKIAS was to be made the exclusive provider of legal advice . |
20 | A few weeks after that incident we received a so-called hot tipoff that an illegal immigrant run was to be made the following night " somewhere between the Thames and Lowestoft ! " |
21 | The return to Keld must be made the same way ; there is no alternative . |
22 | assimilation of the green form scheme with legal aid when the levels of eligibility and contribution could be made the same , with eligibility limits raised ; |
23 | Labour 's reaction to that is that local authority inspection should be made the universal norm , with local authorities inspecting the schools which only they are allowed to run . |
24 | Enthusiasm can spur one on to cram the border full of as many herbs as possible , but some of them are likely to die as a result , and others will be tall and weedy ; it is far better to plant with spaces between them to start with , allowing them room to grow to their full size so that their growth habit and leaf value can be made the most of in the context of the overall design . |
25 | The second thinks of it as a canvas to be made the most of ; yet another surface to decorate or ornament . |
26 | According to this law , if a response made in the presence of a particular stimulus is followed by a reward , that same response is more likely to be made the next time the stimulus is encountered . |
27 | The infant retrieves , or witnesses the retrieval of an object from behind A ( say ) three times , after which he watches as the experimenter moves it to place B. On seeing it vanish at B he will go straight back to A. Although the back-to-A error is more likely to be made the longer the delay between hiding at B and allowing search , this is not a memory problem in any simple sense because the infant will return to A even if the object remains visible at B. We find a particularly clear demonstration of this kind of ‘ perseveration ’ in an experiment by Paul Harris in which there were two transparent , lockable boxes as the A and the B location . |
28 | Some feminists would expand this argument to suggest that the political and/or ethical discussion should be made an explicit part of the methodology of philosophy . |
29 | Still painfully relieved that he was not to be made an unwanted orphan and bundled off to a Home , Frankie left the room without a word . |
30 | He had been promised that once he had obtained his colliery manager 's certificate , he would be made an assistant manager . |