Example sentences of "it make [noun sg] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It made government supporters more optimistic about the economy and opposition supporters more pessimistic . |
2 | It made airline rates subject to review by each government , permitted each country fifth freedom rights in the other , subject to adjustment , and referred disagreements to the PICAO . |
3 | It made privatization part of a wider cultural shift among the British people , including wide swathes of the working class . |
4 | It made trade unions ( rather than just individual organizers of strikes ) liable for damages arising from unlawful industrial actions . |
5 | It makes freedom subservient to control ; and as a result , communism in practice suffers from an inability to put adequate constraints on the urge to control . |
6 | There is no hostility between the staff and us and it makes school life so much easier . |
7 | Made from silk protein , it makes hair shine like glass . |
8 | Brightness masking can be thought of as operating primarily at the feature detector level in Figure 11 ; by reducing the discriminability of target features , it makes feature detection difficult ( or impossible , if the mask is bright enough ) . |
9 | But it 's 24 pages , there 's an interesting club history for those who have n't read it 20 times before and from advertising it makes Roddymoor £400 a year . |
10 | This impotence is inherent in the Keynesian approach to policy and not merely a feature of a specific version of that approach ; for by its very nature it makes government influences on aggregate demand predictable in that it links government policy changes to the current or past state of the economy . |
11 | Cobalt is important in the jet engines of aeroplanes because it makes turbine blades resist high temperatures . |
12 | Where they are uncertain , it makes stock control much more difficult . |
13 | VARI is not a new process — Lotus first used it to make Elite bodies in 1974 . |
14 | In many cases the large size of a company , which is the source of its market power , may enable it to make cost savings which , although not fully passed on , more than compensate for the distorting effects of an uncompetitive market structure . |