Example sentences of "it would make [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The Institute indicated when it commissioned the report that it would make every effort to adopt its proposals wherever possible , and has already agreed on action in a number of areas .
2 It would make no mistake .
3 It would make no sense to say that the dots in the picture had a Gestalt of themselves , but to apply this model to the brain and experience would be just like that ; for , if the experience just is a state of the brain , then there is no way in which the character of the experience can be explained as the result of some perspective on the brain .
4 I am doing my utmost to persuade my colleagues in the Council of Ministers that it would make no sense , for the European Community as well as this country , if the directives were promulgated in their present form .
5 It would make no sense to booby-trap the weapon in these circumstances .
6 ‘ If you came from just down the road it would make no difference .
7 It would make no difference to him .
8 It is true that it would make no difference whether under the old law the offence would have been false pretences or larceny by a trick , provided the charge was laid under section 15(1) .
9 ‘ If he did it would make no difference .
10 If I waited for a hundred years , if I devoted my life to fasting and asceticism and scholarship as the Druids do , still it would make no difference .
11 He reassured everyone that it would make no difference to the course he had set for himself .
12 If there was a man , it would make no difference whether he was Copt or Moslem .
13 He could have six fiancées , and it would make no difference to her .
14 Themistokles , as well as Kimon , perceived the political value of a friendly or at least neutral Delphi : in about 478 , when Sparta tried to expel the medising majority from the Delphic Amphictyony ( the federal organization which decided the sanctuary 's affairs ) , it was Themistokles who opposed them , arguing that to get rid of the medisers would make the Amphictyony unrepresentative of Greece : more bluntly , it would make a present of Delphi to Sparta ( Plut .
15 If such were his meaning here , it would make a nonsense of his other statement that ‘ there is no difference … between men and women ’ !
16 A Cleveland County Council spokesman said it would make a decision on re-opening the road after the strength tests today .
17 It would make a poem too stereotyped if this did in fact happen and so the metrical pattern will be varied .
18 Why tolerate the misery of unemployed people when , if given jobs on works of improvement , it would make a Britain with better services than it has at present ?
19 ‘ Naturally , it would make a difference .
20 I thought it would make a difference being a Mrs but it did n't .
21 It would make a difference to bring the bus back up Albert Road .
22 If this were to be so , it would make a mockery of the caution and the concept of the right to silence after a charge has been preferred .
23 ‘ For some older workers it would make a lot of sense , because together with our ordinary voluntary redundancy payment it is an attractive package . ’
24 It would make a lot of people feel very much easier if he offered his resignation . ’
25 It is too early to say whether this is the way the brain works but , as Rolls ( 1987 ) points out , it would make a lot of sense of a lot of uninterpretable data if it was ; it also makes sense on logical grounds , since it gets round the problems associated with grandmother cells , like the problem of perceiving novel objects and the complexities of arranging the massive degree of convergence of input required for grandmother cells to work .
26 It would make the afternoon so beautiful . ’
27 Nigel remarked gloomily that he did n't suppose it would make the programmes any better , but in a way it did .
28 It would make the conduct of business more difficult .
29 Racal Electronics Plc 's problematic data communications equipment business won a big fillip yesterday when British Telecommunications Plc announced that it would make the company its preferred supplier of new data communications equipment in the UK and internationally .
30 Colchester Borough Council 's planning committee decided to delegate the decision on the application for the church at The Centre on the town 's Greenstead estate to the director of planning and development , John Hutton , provided the applicants submitted new drawings showing more brickwork features and better windows , otherwise it would make the decision at a later meeting .
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