Example sentences of "[is] [vb pp] make the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The reason Newco is formed to make the acquisition , rather than management acquiring Target direct , is that the incorporation of the company facilitates the creation of gearing in the form of fixed-dividend preference shares ; various forms of debt security issued by Newco ; and bank borrowing , to enable Newco to acquire Target .
2 At the moment the beetle squirts the liquid out of its tail , an anti-inhibitor is added to make the mixture explosive once again .
3 Sizing is added to make the paper less absorbent .
4 The Chancellor Norman Lamont is expected to make the battle against unemployment a priority in his budget to be announced next month .
5 Kings Fountain , a creditable runner-up to Remittance Man on his seasonal reappearance at Wincanton , is expected to make the line-up though some of trainer Kim Bailey 's Lambourn string have been coughing .
6 Tony Scullion , though , is expected to make the starting line-up but Seamus Downey and Collie McGurk are out of the reckoning .
7 The Activity Book is in full colour and is designed to make the connection between the book and the video absolutely clear .
8 The coverage of industrial relations , merger consequences , redundancies , equal opportunity legislation , and so on is designed to make the reader aware of issues , and the implications of modern legislation , rather than to act as a manual of practice or standard work of reference .
9 The last but one feature is KEF 's technique of conjugate load matching , an aspect of the crossover design which is designed to make the amplifier 's job easier by simplifying the load .
10 Cow-dung is said to make the mixture more pliable : without it the plaster would crack as soon as it was dry .
11 They will cock to their maximum at the start if the downswing and if no effort is made to make the clubhead catch up , they will remain in this position through impact .
12 This is done to make the debenture more attractive to the investor .
13 Only one such object-referring expression is needed to make the sentence complete .
14 Clearly , if the party input into the development of policy is to be significant then something more than an isolated individual is needed to make the system effective .
15 Notoriously , long and gruelling work is needed to make the notion of political equality fit both these kinds of demand .
16 What is needed to make the contract binding and valid is our signature , a commitment of faith .
17 Thus an output device is needed to make the user aware of what the microcomputer has done .
18 A little careful planning is all that is needed to make the countryside more accessible to the disabled .
19 Tennis World believes passionately in the future of British tennis , but success will be achieved despite the failure of the LTA to appreciate what is needed to make the grade in world tennis today , not as a result of its efforts .
20 An important part of the effort at each centre will be devoted to technical issues relating to the development of the software that is needed to make the information more accessible to potential users .
21 Art therapy is used to make the person transfer their inner feelings into something more tangible .
22 He takes his stand on learning that a piece of basic equipment for patients with broken necks can not be afforded but money is found to make the board room more lavish .
23 Then when the vertical difference is introduced making the Rayleigh number supercritical , the Bénard convection also adopts this pattern .
24 This year , Noreen is determined to make the day as happy as possible for the children .
25 Heseltine is determined to make the DTI pro-active , although there was no hint of this in the Tory manifesto .
26 ‘ It puts Quick Ransom on 8st 1lb and I know Dean is determined to make the weight , ’ the winning trainer added .
27 Despite Morley Street 's shock defeat by Chirkpar in that race last year , Jackson is tempted to make the return trip .
28 Of granite , which he has used in dressings around the doors and windows , he wrote : ‘ Especial care is required to make the mouldings of a broad , bold and massive , rather than a small or delicately undercut character , and to avoid as far as possible anything like minuteness and pettiness in the finish . ’
29 The clerk is required to make the application available for inspection during normal office hours by members of the public from the date of lodging until the first day of the meeting at which it is to be considered ( subs .
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