Example sentences of "make it the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A tribute to the horse and people who 've made it the home of National Hunt racing . |
2 | Why could n't they 've made it the Soton game ? ? |
3 | The sheer scale of the service sector has made it the focus for attack by the proponents of the de-industrialisation thesis . |
4 | Small but perfectly put together — that 's sassy Current Account , a compact A4 publication distributed three or four times a year to a circulation below 1,000 , which might well make it the least-read of any of the winners in the Editing for Industry competition . |
5 | Exactly , we may make it the performance evaluation and the documentation attached to it that provides you your training record . |
6 | On our first day we headed for that beautiful beach … but we did n't make it the temptation was too great to lounge by probably the largest and most stunning freshwater pool in the Canaries . |
7 | yes some will make it the earth , but then again some will vanish |
8 | I mean , why , why make it the pensioners every time ? |
9 | Did the salary make it the offer he could n't refuse ? |
10 | He claimed that there had been a bona-fide revival of Gothic architecture during the reign of Queen Victoria , that there was with those who loved architecture and made it the subject of special study , |
11 | However , the way the CAP worked made it the subject of intense criticism . |
12 | The cast were mainly non-professionals and I think what 's exciting is their contribution to this film made it the success it is . |
13 | The focus of the design was the decorative bar and its back display area , whose strong lighting made it the centrepiece of the pub . |
14 | The Southeast Asian states themselves were reported as having their doubts about Bao Dai 's recognition and , eventually , the Thai Foreign Minister , Pote Sarasin , made it the issue on which he resigned . |
15 | UN Special Representative , Gunnar Jarring , and the US Secretary of State , William Rogers , both made it the foundation of their peace efforts before their failure led to the October 1973 war . |
16 | By the time he made it the sleet had soaked through every layer of his clothing . |
17 | The most significant of these was Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio , which made it the responsibility of an employee to show that an employer used practices adversely affecting women and minorities without any " business necessity " . |
18 | Local folk tales made it the home of mythical monsters . |
19 | Of all the commercial cities of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries Genoa is the best documented , for its marvellous series of notarial registers give us almost a comprehensive view of the sophisticated world of contracts and partnerships , of commerce near and far , which made it the home of a commercial empire stretching from the western Mediterranean to the Middle East . |
20 | SEVEN sendings-off made it the season 's worst day for discipline and took the total to 50 , compared with 64 at the same stage last season . |
21 | The Ideal had to close down , and a vandal 's brick made it the Id al , which spelled the end of an era . |
22 | Behaviouralists drew a sharp distinction between normative and scientific statements , and made it the hallmark of science to avoid the normative . |
23 | A brief encounter with the new range last week convinced me the changes have rejuvenated the car and made it the equal of anything from Munich or Stuttgart . |
24 | Let's work together on this one and make it the success it deserves to be . |
25 | The reductions , it claims , make it the price leader for PC emulation products . |
26 | Pluralists make it the outcome of bureaucratic battles within each state . |
27 | Okay , make it the zoo in the park . |
28 | ‘ So try again , and this time make it the truth . |
29 | At a conference organized in June 1950 by the Liturgical Institute of Trier , a lecture by Romano Guardini led to a resolution calling upon the German bishops to request Rome to move the long Holy Saturday service from the early morning to the late evening , thus again making it the vigil service it once had been . |
30 | Low evening sun slanted across the oily water , making it the colour of pea soup , and lit up the crumbling brickwork of the building opposite . |