Example sentences of "[vb pp] [to-vb] make the " in BNC.
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1 | The annual award is for the trainee deemed to have made the greatest contribution to the Trainee Solicitors Group . |
2 | Can any conductor , though , be said to have made the same impact on recent musical history as that made by Bach or Beethoven or Wagner in the past ? |
3 | And new claims over the extent of that support are said to have made the president-elect furious . |
4 | Like the 41-foot tree trunk under which Hippocrates , the father of medicine , was said to have made the world 's first diagnoses and issued the first prescriptions . |
5 | Two electronics enthusiasts with a radio scanner are said to have made the recordings on New Year 's Eve 1989 , when Princess Di was at Sandringham . |
6 | Ms Pavord supports her ‘ purist ’ proposal by arguing that the National Trust already owns two ‘ real ’ houses — Dyrham and Hanbury — designed by Talman , ‘ the first architect of Uppark ’ and two — Felbrigg and Nostell — by Paine , ‘ thought to have made the saloon at Uppark ’ . |
7 | To create a Chebyshev filter , equation ( 12.22 ) shows that the poles of must be arranged to satisfy Making the helpful substitution so that the required condition ( 12.27 ) becomes or on equating real and imaginary parts Since can not be zero , and and it follows that the poles of are given by equation ( 12.28 ) subject to the two conditions where p is any integer ( positive or negative ) including zero , and Of course , the poles can also be obtained through similar substitution for rather than . |
8 | Mussolini , he reflected , was reputed to have made the trains run on time if nothing else , and he wondered if it might not be a good idea to offer him a job controlling Britain 's network . |
9 | But the council was ruled to have made the correct decision in 71pc of the appeal inquiries which followed . |
10 | But the council was ruled to have made the correct decision in 71pc of the inquiries . |
11 | She would have liked to have made the truth plain — that the feeling , though not one to be taken too seriously , was mutual . |