Example sentences of "it make no [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This should also work perfectly happily on a 1512 system as it make no special demands on graphics presentation .
2 This was thought to be due to the fact that the smaller wheels were leading , but the Metropolitan Electric tramways which had some similar cars on almost identical bogies , turned the bogies round on one of their cars ( No. 25 ) and it made no appreciable difference .
3 It did not seem to be of any consequence , for it made no immediate difference .
4 Its lack of significance is that it made no real difference to the political situation , except for putting the burgh of Edinburgh through a rapid change of councils and giving it the burden of housing the army of the Congregation .
5 obviously it was no good he , you could smoke like a chimney it made no damn difference the state his insides were
6 However , in the study , it made no significant difference whether a male or female teacher directed class activities .
7 It made no fucking sense at all , but Plummer had his reasons for believing the information .
8 Volvo 's two-litre B200 engine had always been smoother than the bigger-bore 2.3 , but it made no more than an adequate job of hauling the corpulent 940 .
9 However , it made no public statement concerning its decision that factual information and suspicions could be mixed in one computer .
10 It made no express reference to proceedings between a named representative of a class and a member of that class who might well have sharply different interests , as betweeen themselves , as to the substance of the plaintiff 's claim .
11 Except for its good light requirement , it makes no other specific demands .
12 But it makes no such specific point about assessed needs .
13 Inactive Supplement text has its status marked so that it makes no further demands upon lexicographic time and effort , and is not selected for composition or transfer to the Working-Set .
14 He looked up at the apple tree and replied , ‘ It makes no fucking difference , Piper , where you dig it .
15 The conventionalist conception of law , on the contrary , is interpretive : it makes no linguistic or logical claim of that kind .
16 We do this , notionally , in any matrix multiplication : if we are performing the operation BC = A then we isolate a row of B and a column of C — respectively ( 1 × n ) and ( n × 1 ) submatrices — to produce an element — i.e. a ( 1 × 1 ) submatrix of A. Similarly , we could , for example , isolate the first three rows of B and the first four columns of C and multiply these submatrices , of order ( 3 × n ) and ( n × 4 ) , to give a ( 3 × 4 ) submatrix in the top left corner of A. Again , since unc it makes no different if we divide the range , s , of summation into subranges ; each subrange can be summed , and these sums added to give the total .
17 It makes no more sense to talk about solutions without being absolutely clear about what problems they solve , than it does to talk about excellent answers to questions that have never been posed .
18 It makes no more sense to say that the perspectival appearance is true ( or false ) of the object than it would be to say that the size of the angle of a triangle is true ( or false ) of the other two angles , which determine its size .
19 So even if it makes no particular appeal to you , read I beg you , this chapter .
20 It makes no ethical statement whatsoever .
21 It makes no earthly sense . ’
  Next page