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

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1 Another major concession in the draft law was that it made no provision for stationing Chinese troops in Macao after 1999 .
2 This witticism received rapturous applause and left his speechwriters beaming , no one seemingly bothered by the fact that it made no sense .
3 Even before the advent of the Crown Prosecution Service , the Home Office had extended the hand of friendship to the Lord Chancellor 's Department , recognizing that it made no sense for each of them to prepare their annual public expenditure forecasts in isolation from the other .
4 The answer given to the first certified question was in line with those pronouncements , so even though Viscount Dilhorne was of opinion that the evidence fell short of establishing that Mr. Occhi had consented to the taking of the £6 it was a matter of decision that it made no difference whether or not he had so consented .
5 Perceiving all this , she knew also that it made no difference .
6 These results showed that it made no difference to RISC whether register variables ( hints that variables will be used frequently and should be kept in a register ) were declared or not .
7 I can cheerfully admit that it made no impact on me apart from an overwhelming urge to be violently sick .
8 It should therefore have been aware of the danger that he would try to cover his liabilities from whatever funds he had access to ( Eagle 's funds ) , but that it made no inquiries about the source of the monies or how he had met his obligations .
9 So far , the ministry has chosen not to explain why it did not act over this matter , to admit that it made a mistake , and to fully compensate all those who have suffered trauma and considerable financial losses as a result of its negligence .
10 Eleanor , ’ she said again , as she began to realise that it made a lot of sense .
11 In fact , it never occurred to me that it made a difference until I was in a trial and a scout said ‘ We 're quite interested in the coloured lad ’ and that was the first time I realized they thought of me as anything other than my name .
12 Nothing but the best for Lucy , and that meant a month of sober evenings honing every flip phrase so that it made a point .
13 This has no application when the type of substantive error is that the tribunal was improperly constituted , or that it made an order which it was not empowered to make .
14 But it was only because much , too , bore very directly upon the most urgent domestic questions that it made an impact at home .
15 When he changed from an acoustic to an electric guitar so overloaded that it made the windows of the little studios rattle , you could still sometimes hear his feet rapping on the boards and the irregular chord sequences and the trademark himmahimmahimm drifting through the air .
16 Mary Whitehouse denounced it for encouraging in-corridor insurrection , while Russell Knott from the National Association Of Schoolmasters complained that it made the teachers look like twats .
17 I was informed that British Steel would be making a decision on the day that it made the decision — I was informed in confidence some days before that it would be making a decision on that day .
18 This state of human ability was reached centuries ago , but the power of the hierarchy was such that it made the application of reason to religious belief heretical and punishable , and has successfully delayed its application even into this late twentieth century .
19 ‘ The crying was so loud and so wonderful that it made the people astounded unless they had heard it before ’ ; she ‘ made wondrous faces and expressions ’ too .
20 An additional advantage of this method of presentation is that it made the situation less realistic for subjects .
21 Not that it makes a whits difference to how the team plays or what team Wilko puts out on Saturday .
22 One of the more significant aspects of the panel 's report is that it makes a try at preventing repetitions of the affair .
23 The argument against trickle transfer is that it makes a nonsense of rational rational housing management .
24 not that it makes a lot of difference
25 I am not complaining , only pointing out that it makes a difference to the tone of a campaign .
26 But I am saying that the phrase ‘ there occur mental processes ’ does not mean the same sort of thing as ‘ there occur physical processes ’ , and , therefore , that it makes no sense to conjoin or disjoin the two .
27 Any intelligent man , once he has been given the opportunity to voice his feelings , will understand just what he has done and be able to see that it makes no sense at all to build upon an isolated failure when he has a lifetime of ‘ successes ’ about which he could think .
28 The objection was that we can be right or wrong in what we judge , but that it makes no sense to talk of something imprinted , an impression or sensation , being right or wrong .
29 The Government 's desire to assist charities is seen in concessions to individuals , such as Gift Aid , payroll giving and covenants , but the Chairman remarked that it makes no sense if the Institution has to hand the money back , and more through Value Added Tax .
30 One argument advanced for this is that it makes no sense to include mortality data in a formula for resource allocation as dead people make no use of health services .
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