Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] makes [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 She usually makes the little figures to resemble the couple and their entourage .
2 She also makes the crucial point that it is wrong to attribute it to the mass of black people , finding it most marked among some intellectual and political leaders , who also obscure the central roles played by lesbians and gays in black communities .
3 She also makes the interesting observation that the age of the doctor and the nurse partly determines their attitude .
4 I like it because I 'm out , I think , and I like looking in the shops and sometimes I bump into people I know , and it just makes a little break
5 But it just makes the relevant statistics a bit more congenial .
6 I hope he soon makes a full recovery . ’
7 The canal was derelict for many years , but now flows again to produce electricity for the neighbourhood ; and it still makes a pleasant summer evening walk from Tavistock to the tunnel mouth .
8 It adds that , although he lives in Macclesfield , he still makes a weekly trip to his flat in North London ‘ to keep in touch with the seamier side of life which often inspires his work ’ — a habit which has qualified him uniquely to illustrate Mr Boot 's Unauthorised Returns .
9 But the theory is a mechanistic one ; the individual creature is genetically pre-programmed to act in the way it does ; statistically speaking it has no choice ; within a narrow range of variation , it always makes a predictable response to identifiable patterns of stimuli originating in the external environment .
10 It also makes an ideal target for every enemy war machine in sight .
11 Most people think of serving this delicacy with slices of ripe melon as a starter , but it also makes an excellent accompaniment to many of the exotic fruits that are widely available in greengrocers and supermarkets .
12 This example not only illustrates Sylvester 's law ; it also makes the important point that the degeneracy of the product depends on the relative positions of the units , and therefore of the linearly independent columns , in the two factors .
13 After listening to Tindle talking excitedly about The Raft , Minton began work on The Survivors ( National Gallery of Canada , Ottawa ) , in which he wisely makes no direct allusion to Géricault 's masterpiece , the experience of which had caused Delacroix to run through the streets like a madman , as any attempt to retranslate this powerfully emotive image would have resulted in failure .
14 Top left : Elizabeth Jane 's father installed this shelf above a kitchen window and it now makes a colourful setting for a blue and white plate collection .
15 The , for us as members to have all these beautiful diagrams , it really makes a tremendous difference .
16 Now , however , he simply makes a small incision in , or beside , the navel and inserts a laparoscope ( viewing tube ) to see inside .
17 In general the discourse analyst works with a tape-recording of an event , from which he then makes a written transcription , annotated according to his interests on a particular occasion — transcriptions of the sort which will appear in this book .
18 The android continues to fulfil all its courtly duties and even becomes a trusted confidant of the Emperor , and the princess discovers it actually makes a better lover than the original .
19 But this drug works in a very different way and it actually helps to take the strain off your heart er and it actually makes a huge difference .
20 It certainly makes a great difference to our lives when we see prayer as delighting in God .
21 It certainly makes a refreshing change from reams of text menus .
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