Example sentences of "[noun sg] it make [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 you swing , you multiply it around the council it makes a difference
2 In one way , of course , Nick had been quite right when he had said that whatever the truth it made no difference .
3 In the event it made no difference : his property was confiscated under the Act of Attainder .
4 it was hot , it was dust in that hammer drill , god it makes a noise , it did , it certainly saved a lot though
5 At the peak it made a fortune — not from building houses or office blocks but from land inflation .
6 Marie 's parents had strong religious views that made her feel very guilty about having sex in their home when she and her husband had to live there for a while : " We did it on the bedroom floor on the wedding night because I would n't use the bed , in case it made a noise .
7 in case it makes a difference to your
8 Of course it made a difference .
9 If it was a member of Connelly 's gang it made no sense , yet who else would know about the shipment ?
10 In the film version it makes no difference whether he gets there in time or not .
11 On the one hand it makes no demands , he wrote , on the other it is the vitriol which corrodes everything with which it comes into contact , the Gorgon which turns to stone all who gaze upon it .
12 In the end it makes no difference , it is all part of the manifestation of the existence of an area of human life that can not be ignored .
13 But when they 're to be ground up for fish meal it makes no difference .
14 What 's more , while the AccuCard can handle standard DOS Extended and Expanded memory it makes no attempt to save XMS or VCPI Extended memory .
15 Last year it made the bulk of the MMB 's profits with £45.5m after charges of £14.4m , but before £21m exceptional items .
16 … For that purpose it makes no difference whether the illegality is raised in the plaintiff 's claim or by way of reply to a ground of defence … ( ii ) Where the grant of relief to the plaintiff would enable him to benefit from his criminal conduct : … ( iii ) Where , even though neither ( i ) nor ( ii ) is applicable to the plaintiff 's claim , the situation is nevertheless residually covered by the general principle summarised in ( i ) above .
17 This time it made the trip from West Croydon to Sutton and passengers included the Mayors of Sutton and Cheam and of Beddington and Wallington .
18 This looks easier in that you are nearer the solution but in fact it makes the task impossible .
19 In his view it makes no difference whether the devotee conceives of God in personal or in impersonal terms since the one class of devotee is not inferior to the other .
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