Example sentences of "[noun] to make [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Only a few of these had pods , but here and elsewhere we found enough pods to make an important observation : all the wild cocoa throughout the Amazon region of Ecuador shares a common set of genetically determined characteristics including white seeds , very rough-surfaced yellow pods , and the absence of red pigmentation in the leaves .
2 There are many fertility treatments available to childless couples , and fertility counselling aims to enable clients to make an informed choice .
3 Helpless in her pinioned position , she opened her mouth to make a cutting retort and met Roman 's questing finger , slowly outlining her mouth , feathering indescribable sensations over the surface of her skin , then sliding between her lips and parting them with such lazy insistence that a shiver of reaction made her tremble all over .
4 You might feel that 1,000 Ks is ample , but if you need more steps to make the total transition plausible in you mind , simply allow yourself to assume 10,000 Ks .
5 It is perfectly possible in law for parties to make an interim agreement for the sale of goods which requires further negotiation to iron out the less important details of the transaction , Pagnan S.p.A .
6 His own practice , as recorded in one of a series of articles which appeared in the Manchester Guardian in October and November 1930 * by one of the pupils who attended the evening classes he held there once a week between 1925 and 1927 , was from a drawing to make a careful sketch in various hades of one colour , obtaining in this way the construction of the picture and the suggestion for various tonal values .
7 It was then that I resolved to enjoy the rest of the year , accept that I simply did not have the talent to make the professional grade , and find a job .
8 It 's use your equation to make a little table .
9 I had arrived at Ullapool by bus in mid-afternoon , determined to satisfy an ambition to make a first visit to Lochinver .
10 Yet I do n't doubt the wisdom of the climber who , faced with a dodgy bollard at the end of a great day out , is happy to sacrifice an axe to make a sure abseil .
11 Cream voile has been lavishly draped around the metal four- poster bedstead to make an attractive centrepiece .
12 Moreover , the head claimed that he had been able to use the appraisal to make a strong case against a proposed reduction of 7.4 staff , in line with cutbacks planned by the LEA due to falling rolls and reductions in spending .
13 They can use snow to make a big ball or snowman .
14 In the absence of this information , it is sound practice to make a secondary arrangement of key words ; they can not be left as they are above , for they make sense only as their interrelation is explicitly shown .
15 On the 23rd , however , even after percolating the softening filters of G.Q.G. the reports sounded so bad that Joffre was persuaded to dispatch his Assistant Chief of Staff , Colonel Claudel , to Verdun to make an on-the-spot report .
16 And it 's certainly not available in sufficient detail for for all of the sectors to make a fair comparison and I think Mr has made this point in in when you 've questioned him a number of times today that the information is just not available or to hand to make to make that comparison .
17 These may be small operations with one or two senior public relations executives with a shared secretary , with sufficient turnover to make a good living .
18 Though Macao 's small population made it easier for Portugal to make a grand gesture , it triggered renewed bitterness in Hong Kong .
19 I warn the readers to make an accurate distinction between idea , or a conception of the mind , and the images of things …
20 Michael Green draws attention to the fact that the Gospels represent an entirely new literary form , which was neither history , nor biography , but a highly selective weaving together of fragments using preaching and teaching ‘ arranged in order to show what sort of person Jesus was , to give the evidence on which the disciples had followed him and had adjudged him the Messiah and Son of God , and by the strongest possible implication , challenge the readers to make the same act of faith in Christ as they themselves had done ’ ( Green 1970:229 , 230 ) .
21 To some extent partnership was a new concept , asking industry to make an on-going commitment to an activity which had no previous examples which would recommend it .
22 If they are as divorced from experience as they seem , the only explanations for their regular occurrence in a variety of people must be either , following Jung , that these are archetypal dreams with some allegorical significance , or that they represent an attempt to make sense out of experiences really occurring during dreaming sleep — an attempt to make a coherent story out of some pattern of the highly active discharges from the hindbrain which are a feature of REM sleep .
23 Another said : ‘ Here is the year 's most significant attempt to make a low energy consumption/low emissions car that is practical , good looking and feasible . ’
24 The omission of the verb gives an immediacy which would be missing from a construction such as It is a virgin scene ( where the present tense is a direct attempt to make a coding time and content time the same ) .
25 On the economic front , the near-heroic attempt to make a centralised economy work has produced , with Bonn 's support , a real success story .
26 I must say that the way the discussion has gone this morning , is n I would say , slightly disappointing because there is some attempt to make a positive contribution , but at the moment it 's not necessarily pointing us quite in the direction which we would hope to go .
27 So too an attempt to make a direct gift , which fails because the proper method of transfer is not employed , will not take effect as a trust .
28 Some thought it was an attempt to make the long hitters go for the green across the water so they made it twenty-five paces shorter .
29 " y own objection is different , and concerns the attempt to make the actual availability of such criteria a condition of meaningfulness of the idea of numerical identity .
30 But Conran had decided not to soft-pedal in the US and had made up his mind to make a big splash immediately , which required large investments which it took years to recoup .
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