Example sentences of "to make [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Controllers urged him to make for a remote runway which would take him over fields and small villages .
2 They had decided to make for a small river valley in which there was an isolated church reached by a footpath across fields .
3 Superbly intelligent and well-crafted on record , surfing along upon churning , chiming guitars , Chadwick 's crew have proved unpredictable enough onstage to make for a compelling night out .
4 It was n't any use going back to the shop now ; she would phone Myra , then she would get down to designing the bridesmaids ' dresses that would match the bride 's gown she was commissioned to make for a big wedding in the autumn .
5 It was a relief therefore to make for the frozen shore where the parson was protesting that his wife would be safer and more comfortable if she remained in the carriage .
6 She started as though to make for the front door , but Mr Hunter held up a hand to stop her .
7 There are areas , one or two of which I will go on to elude to , which I still think are actually going to make for the greatest savings in the coming financial year and thereafter .
8 If a cat enters a room where several people are talking , it is very likely to make for the one person there who has an abnormal fear of felines .
9 But there 's even more to disagree with , particularly in the suggested preparations we are told to make for the forthcoming holocaust .
10 When on two occasions Ewen turned to make for the open sea , Neil , increasing our speed slightly , held on to what looked like a collision course .
11 No one had any comment to make for the excellent reason that everyone had already been convinced of the fact .
12 The BBC had no comment to make about the deepening row and said it had no knowledge of any plans to oust him .
13 He had a point or two to make about the present regime but if there was a hint of criticism it was of the gentlest sort .
14 I mean , for me personally I think there 's actually a decision that if I ca n't get over the full unbiased impression that I want to make about the whole story , I 've got to make a decision whether I 'm going to talk to you at all .
15 Lennon fans might well object to the implicit glamorisation of his nemesis , but it is clear that Dallmeyer has serious points to make about the noble ideals of the Sixties , loneliness , and the emotional abuse of children .
16 The focus of this theory is upon the comparison individuals are presumed to make between the marginal value of an extra hour of work or leisure .
17 It was the first in a series of brutal references to the ‘ Jewish Question ’ which Hitler came to make during the following years .
18 But what is one to make of a solemn pronouncement in a Companies Act that ‘ an insurance company which contravenes a restriction to which it is subject by virtue of subsections ( 1 ) or ( 2 ) above shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years ’ ?
19 ‘ It was an impertinent request to make of a professional man such as yourself .
20 Three points should be emphasised about the nature and extent of the appraisal that the Commission is obliged to make of a proposed concentration under the Merger Regulation :
21 I suggested a second or so ago that the ordinary reader , unsure of what to make of the shifting realities of Joyce 's writing , might defensively assume that no such hesitations would trouble the experienced reader , but that is far from being a homogeneous class .
22 Ferranti was unsure of what to make of the feverish stock market speculation .
23 What , then , in the face of these many and conflicting voices , is the Christian to make of the Holy Spirit ?
24 What , then , is one to make of the startling price of the slim biography ?
25 For the moment , the demand to make of the nuclear powers is not for a test ban but for five-power talks and joint research to explore more defensible ways of going about their testing business .
26 Nobody had been quite sure either what to make of the stuffed animal heads on the wall , and the large crocodile sprawled across one of the floors .
27 I FIRST came across Theatre de Complicite seven years ago in a show called More Bigger Snacks Now , which featured a definitive demonstration of just how much mess it is possible to make with a few packets of crisps and a couple of cans of Coke .
28 Should you be lucky enough to own a ‘ filofax ’ , there are many kinds of graph paper , different coloured notepapers , and diary sheets that you can purchase to make into a comprehensive section on your new diet and health programme .
29 The release included statements that ‘ the discovery will be relatively easy to make into a usable technology for generating heat and power ’ ; and that ‘ this generation of heat continues over long periods and is so large that it can only be attributed to a nuclear process ’ .
30 It is derived from a plant called Datura that European witches used to make into a psychedelic ointment .
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