Example sentences of "[noun sg] to make [adv prt] for [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It 's an income redistribution to make up for 12 years of Reagan and Bush in which the rich got richer and the poor got poorer .
2 Sometimes she thought that she and William both had a need to make up for those lost ten years .
3 I wonder what the Labour party would cut elsewhere in the health service to make up for that loss of revenue .
4 The theory is that if museums save on salaries and paper clips they will have more money to spend on works of art ; the reality is that they will almost certainly be saving on the works of art to make up for inadequate funding overall .
5 Maybe this was my chance to make up for all those little oversights and lapses in the past , which we all have no matter how hard we try to forget or overlook them .
6 Gimenez , who went the distance before losing to a 36-year-old Roberto Duran in 1987 is relishing his chance to make up for lost time .
7 However , anyone who is on the move , under stress or is likely to skip meals should think about taking a multi-vitamin and mineral supplement to make up for any deficiencies in diet .
8 They found that , although it did make a difference in a few cases , most babies got enough iron from solid food to make up for any loss through drinking cow 's milk .
9 The executive Board approved drawings , equivalent to 468,9000,000 special drawing rights ( about US $635 million ) , under its compensatory and contingency financing facility ( CCFF ) in order to make up for anticipated balance-of-payments deficits caused by higher oil prices and lower exports and Gulf remittances .
10 Babies have very immature immune systems and rely upon breast milk to make up for this deficiency as it contains protective factors .
11 It would n't be realistic to expect Christmas to make up for three flat years , ’ commented Sue Butterworth at Silver Moon Bookshop on the Charing Cross Road .
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