Example sentences of "making such [art] " in BNC.

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1 It 's what comes of making such a mystery of it .
2 I have many examples in my fieldnotes which show this mode of thought to be so ingrained , that even when the possibility of making such a journey ‘ back ’ to basic police work has long since evaporated , the supremacy of the belief still remains :
3 I was surprised by two conclusions that came from making such a list .
4 Then the original examining magistrate was dismissed from the case for making such a muddle of it .
5 He felt the contact was so invaluable that he was prepared to turn down the job at the head of one of the UK 's premier blue-chip companies if it meant making such a sacrifice .
6 Nobody could deny Mr Gummer this small triumph , but he might make more friends if he did n't always insist on making such a meal of it .
7 We might think of the real essence of a triangle , ‘ three lines enclosing a space ’ , as instructions for making such a figure : it is how that figure is constituted .
8 Women 's exemption from these time-geared precepts was the result both of their extensive periods of ritual impurity and of their designated role as closeted homemakers — though of course in making such a statement , we immediately involve ourselves in a greater degree of circularity .
9 One of these entered the popular literature and is still repeated by journalists , despite the fact that Hugh McClean , who , in admitting his part in the Shankill UVF killings , is supposed to have said : ‘ I am terribly sorry I ever heard of that man Paisley or decided to follow him ’ , later denied making such a statement to the police .
10 Examples of the current price differences are : £136 charged by Ford for an Escort Mark III front panel , compared with £54 from an independent supplier — the true cost of making such a panel is closer to £10 ; Peugeot charges £136.50 for a bonnet on its 405 model , £85 from an independent ; A headlamp on a Granada Mark III can cost £106.50 from a Ford dealer , £67 from an independent .
11 A young industrialist stepped forward impatiently to make his case : ‘ I do n't see what you 're all making such a fuss about .
12 If he was begging , he seemed hardly to expect that anyone would give him money for making such a noise .
13 We also begin to realize that making such a choice is not merely a matter of changing habits , even habits of mind .
14 fourth , a patient on a machine making such a request is a comparatively rare phenomenon .
15 It was awful making such a fool of himself in front of Nutty .
16 This is not to say that there is only one right way of making such a choice but it can be helpful to have an insight into your own personal style of decisionmaking , and how this was applied to your career choice .
17 The eels were making such a noise that all the other fishes started making a noise as well , which woke up the Loch Ness Monster ’ .
18 ( Silly old woman , I thought , making such a fuss . )
19 O'Neill 's Wycombe Wanderers are making such a one-horse race of the Vauxhall Conference that West Bromwich Albion , latest exponents of Ardiles ' beloved ‘ diamond ’ formation , will warily arrive at Adams Park .
20 ‘ I 'm sorry for making such a fuss , ’ Joan said apologetically , drying her eyes — before taking a few sips of the wine which she did not much like .
21 I said , ‘ I feel so stupid , making such a fuss . ’
22 It may explain why he is making such a mess of the job .
23 The way a sentence ( or indeed any complex expression ) is generated within a Montague grammar provides a possible synchronic fossil of how , diachronically , the language acquired the complexity making such a sentence possible .
24 EMC Corp , the Hopkinton , Massachusetts firm making such a noise with its disk arrays for IBM Corp mainframe users , will is taking advantage of the large pool of trained talent — boosted by large numbers of immigrants from the former Soviet Union , and will open a Research and Development Center in Tel Aviv , Israel on June 1 .
25 I would argue that the introduction of literate/pre-literate as the criterion for making such a division has given the tradition a new lease of life just as it was wilting under the powerful challenge of recent work in social anthropology , linguistics and philosophy .
26 As regards the Dinka , he suggests that it may be possible to persuade users of the language to reply to questions about the mind — body dichotomy : it is not that the language is incapable , at a formal level , of making such a distinction , but that such usage would be unrepresentative in cultural terms .
27 A judgement that an action is morally good is universalizable in the sense that by making such a judgement one commits oneself to holding that any relevantly similar action is morally good .
28 The attitude-holder becomes a ‘ lay-economist ’ in making such a judgement : it is as if rational calculations have been made .
29 By a notice of motion dated 14 February 1992 the local authority appealed against those parts of the order which directed that there should be no contact between the father and the girl until after the local authority review and that there should be supervised contact between the girl and her half-sister , on the grounds that ( 1 ) the justices had been wrong in law in failing to invite the parties to comment on the agreed proposals for contact ; ( 2 ) the justices had been wrong in law in failing to indicate to the parties the nature of the orders for contact which they proposed to make , thereby depriving the parties of the opportunity to make submissions relating to those proposals ; ( 3 ) the justices had wrongly exercised their discretion in authorising the local authority to refuse contact to the girl by the father for only six months when they had found as a fact , inter alia , that the father had abused the girl over a period of at least 18 months ; ( 4 ) the justices had been wrong to impose the condition of supervision on contact between the girl and her half-sister when there had been no application for such contact to be supervised , the evidence was that the half-sister had been enjoying unsupervised contact and that there was no evidence that there was any risk of the girl coming into contact with her father while having contact with her half-sister , and the justices had heard evidence that the local authority were considering placing the girl with her half-sister and by their order they had precluded the local authority from making such a placement and had fettered the discretion of the local authority ; and ( 5 ) the order was therefore contrary to the girl 's best interests .
30 If it 's breaking down lots of food , a really heavy meal , then it 's actually maybe making such a big demand on the oxygen level in your bloodstream that your oxygen level in your bloodstream drops and there 's not enough to go round the muscles to make to break up any lactic acid that 's being formed .
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