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

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1 Since the Prime Minister acknowledges convergence to be a matter of considerable importance in the development of the European Community , why is it , now that the Engineering Employers Federation , the Confederation of British Industry and his noble Friends in the House of Lords have all made cause for new investment incentives for British industry , that he and the remainder of the Government refuse to take such initiatives in order to support this very best way of securing recovery ?
2 This low level pixel oriented approach obviously makes sense for complex images with no formal structure , such as budgerigars .
3 However it only makes provision for criminal penalties , and not civil remedies .
4 These reports assess the situation for a particular service or type of trained staff and usually make recommendations for improving quality and supply .
5 Our main programme tomorrow is earlier than usual at 6.00 p.m. to make way for European Soccer later in the evening .
6 Firms may also make provision for bridging loans or provide temporary mortgage facilities .
7 In the academy , where a semblance of pluralism persists , it is perfectly acceptable to introduce elements of Women 's Studies material into the curriculum which , during the last fifteen years or so , has also made space for Black Studies , the teaching of race relations and working-class history .
8 For Christ 's Hospital he designed the new grammar school ( 1793 , demolished ) — receiving a gratuity of 100 guineas ‘ for his great attention during the building ’ because he had charged at a rate of only 2½ per cent instead of the usual 5 per cent — and additions to the school in Hertford ( 1800 ) , and also made designs for various ambitious unexecuted schemes for redeveloping the main buildings .
9 It also makes sense for homeless families who are stuck in one room to develop as a family in a proper way
10 And of course the same is true of shop assistants so do please make allowances for human error .
11 The classic Hollywood narrative , he proposes , in a manner quite similar to Bakhtin 's , is defined by the centrality of a logic of causation to which character is central , and to which space and time are always subordinate : ‘ In the Hollywood style the systems do not play equal roles : space and time are almost invariably made vehicles for narrative causality ’ .
12 People were aware their children sometimes made problems for other people and they did n't bring them .
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