Example sentences of "[verb] it [adv] easy for [art] " in BNC.
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1 | In this case it seems that the structure of the drama has made it too easy for the children — perhaps because of the non-confrontational role adopted by the teacher as messenger early on , when he was excited and enthusiastic about the railway and its effect on another town . |
2 | It could make it much easier for the presenter to describe an unusual item , and here perhaps a sample of the article itself might make life even simpler . |
3 | If it is , this will make it much easier for the creative people : if they can not actually find a typical individual customer , they can at least get a reasonably good idea of whom they are trying to reach . |
4 | Apart from specific anatomical and physiological disabilities which may make it less easy for the individual to maintain safety , there are many external agents in the environment which can cause injury and disease . |
5 | The Sex Pistols ( who once touched on a similar subject ) also made sense , once , but although Johnny Rotten was a wry and clever ambassador for the feeling of the youth , he equally made it perfectly easy for the tabloids to pin him with yobbishness . |
6 | If an expert adopted a code of conduct , it would become part of his contract with the parties and make it much easier for a party to make a claim in the case of a breach . |
7 | So often , people make it so easy for the criminal — it 's a gift ! |
8 | ‘ The Single Market demands that we define Europe , not the UK , as our domestic market and that we make it as easy for a customer in Turin , Munich or Nice to buy from us as one in Coventry or London . ’ |
9 | By using the back heel placed on the centreline , pull the back of the board towards you thereby making it infinitely easier for the rig to pull you over the board . |
10 | One is the ability to retract the claws on its front feet , making it much easier for the animal to manipulate objects in its ‘ hands ’ . |
11 | To make it slightly easier for the caddies , most championship courses now have 100- , 150- and 200-yard markers , and many use a pedometer — or the ‘ wheel ’ as they call it — to measure out . |
12 | This continuous appraisal helps to determine the prices at which securities are traded and makes it much easier for the institutional investors to reach a swift decision when they are invited to subscribe to or underwrite a new issue . |