Example sentences of "[subord] it make [pron] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 RETURNED to London after too long an absence , Le Cirque Imaginaire is back until 6 March in the Riverside Studios where it made its UK debut many years ago .
2 So it makes your job easier .
3 I wonder if it makes your brain go doolally though
4 I 'd like to try a perm to see if it makes my hair more manageable .
5 they say cos it makes your stomach think it 's gon na get food
6 I prefer this cos it makes my back ache .
7 I did n't because it made her feet ache .
8 well Lindsey , mind she smoking when she was twelve and drinking and she did n't like it she says because it made her head go all funny and she did n't know what was going on , what was happening .
9 Christianity is not true because it makes its claims more boldly or more loudly than anything else ( or belief would be taken over by bravado ) .
10 But it 's hard to talk because it makes your jaws so cold !
11 Cos they 've got see I do n't know whether I do n't know whether it makes it Hemmings hey 've got nought percent disc er interest and all that sort of stuff on every single thing
12 Bingham J. dismissed Mr. Cheall 's action ; the Court of Appeal ( by a majority ) allowed his appeal , but the House of Lords , in turn , allowed an appeal against this court 's decision and upheld Bingham J. One of the issues before the House of Lords was whether Mr. Cheall had been entitled to be heard by the disputes committee of the T.U.C. before it made its decision .
13 The company also intends eventually to produce Asynchronous Transfer Mode products , but is waiting for the specifications to be finalised before it makes its move .
14 Already the club have learned they will receive in the region of £8,500 towards travelling costs when it makes its debut in the Courage National League Division Four next season .
15 The business to which the goods are sold ( if it is registered for VAT ) , when it makes its return to Customs and Excise , claims back the VAT which it has paid on the goods , which is known as the input tax .
16 The weakness of this is that it fails to view the implications of the spending when it makes its impact but only when the spending actually takes place .
17 It is true that it would not prevent the mortgagee taking possession , though it made his position in some degree uncomfortable if he did take possession .
18 The galley pulled away , its oars dipping as it made its way down , following the tide out into the open sea .
19 Azhag flew over the battlefield on his wyvern , swooping upon regiment after regiment and harrying the retreating army as it made its way to the refuge of Wolfenburg .
20 Self and Citrine frequently had to sit through the same item of business as it made its way through three , or in extreme cases five , formal meetings of different bodies before being finally approved .
21 Many of the small boats which usually travelled its waters were moored for the night and The Sandhopper passed a number of them as it made its way up river .
22 " As you say , right , yes , will do , will do , " the small figure said , backing off , half-nodding , half-bowing as it made its way backwards to the winding-stair .
23 The great skua stercorarius skua is an exciting bird to see along our coasts at this time of year as it makes its way from its northern breeding ground to its wintering area .
24 The station was reached via the Whisker Hill curve , seen in this rare view of Royal Scot 46151 ‘ The Royal Horse Guardsman ’ as it makes its way round the bend with an excursion .
25 As it makes its way along , the carp also takes in a certain amount of plant matter .
26 If you could follow a leopard as it makes its way along such a track or even through the jungle itself , you would see that the animal blazes its own trail every 20 yards ( 18 m ) or so by spraying trees and bushes with its scent mark .
27 I immediately stop the engine and we drift parallel to the animal as it makes its way down the beach and into the sea .
28 Thus if we are walking in the pastoral , remote country on the borders of Leicestershire and Rutland , following the Eye brook as it makes its way south through undulating fields to the Welland , we pass in a walk of nine or ten miles through a landscape modelled in five different centuries , and this in a part of England that is generally accounted somewhat dull , the monotonous product of parliamentary enclosure .
29 The River Wye winds through 60 miles of spectacular countryside as it makes its way through Gloucestershire and Herefordshire .
30 The mountain everlasting ( Antennaria dioica ) with its dainty little furry flowers is known in Gaelic as literally ‘ cat 's paw ’ , while the marsh marigold ( Caltha palustris ) is known as ‘ the yellow plant of Beltane ’ , for it makes its appearance at Beltane , May first , thus marking the second half of the ancient Celtic year .
  Next page