Example sentences of "but [pron] make [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | After what he 'd said she did n't dare turn the key in the lock , but she made short work of undressing . |
2 | But she made light work of polishing off the shopping at a supermarket near her West London home . |
3 | ‘ But she makes nice chocolate cake and she 's handy when the cook 's on holiday , ’ she admitted as she examined her face in the shine . |
4 | ‘ But who made that telephone call ? |
5 | The weather was not too promising , but we made good time and were soon at the first terrace . |
6 | But we make common cause in attaching more significance to them than do the theories ( except perhaps for Idealism ) discussed so far . |
7 | Proposals such as these aroused considerable debate in the 1930s ( particularly on the question of whether , for every job vacated by an older worker , a new one would be created for a younger person ) , but they made little headway with the National Government . |
8 | Bicker muttered to himself as he rode in front , but they made better time for the wind had not risen and the sun was almost warm . |
9 | Like the silkmoth , ants sense pheromones through their antennae ; but they make continual use of both antennae to keep them in the right direction . |
10 | ‘ But he make big money . |
11 | Upon his Roman nose , a tiny pair of gold-rimmed spectacles might have seemed insignificant — but he made great play with them . |
12 | In classifying them he followed Aristotle in considering as many characters as possible ; but he made great use of the ‘ principle of correlation ’ , the way in which all the parts of an animal work together . |
13 | But he made little effort to develop this outside his own definitions of the genealogical method , while his shift into the problematics of power seemed to lead him into a labyrinth from which it was virtually impossible to extract himself . |
14 | But it made awful mess . |
15 | It may have rained for hours , but it made little difference to the River Lambourn . |
16 | The first meeting of the Institution of Civil Engineers was held on 2 January 1818 with eight founder members present , but it made slow progress until in 1820 Telford , who never joined the Smeatonians , agreed to become the first president . |
17 | The ability of modern technology to cope with the problem of soil erosion is summarised thus : ‘ Growing populations may in part have destroyed more land than they improved , but it makes little sense to project past trends into the future , since we know more and more about methods of land preservation and are able by means of modern methods , to reclaim much land , which our ancestors have made sterile . ’ |
18 | This need not be a problem , especially as each will have a different approach to the same material , but it makes obvious sense on many counts if the teachers are each prepared for this by consultation . ) |
19 | Clearly there may well be more than an element of exaggeration in this insistence , but it makes more sense if we accept their view that a great many features of literature that might not normally be recognized , at least at first sight , as terms of a comparison , nonetheless have a metaphorical or analogical function . |
20 | But it makes commercial sense for them to respond to pressure . |
21 | But what makes this machine really special is that it offers you the chance to create an unlimited range of embroidery designs . |
22 | But what makes this book really good , is the style . |
23 | But what makes sexual athlete ? |