Example sentences of "make [pron] [noun pl] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 And now I really make my jokes on the spot .
2 Users make their requests in a simple command language .
3 They make their decisions on the basis of two pieces of information : the level of output Q and the associated tax liability T. This means that they may have an idea of the average tax price Q/T of such services .
4 The courts make their calculations on the basis of the current provisions and do not speculate on future changes .
5 This is a fantastic place for birdwatchers — puffin , falcon , raven , gannet , guillemot and cormorants , to name but a few , make their homes along the coastline and on its islands for part of the year .
6 Here , they are taken by the ocean currents into the Gulf Stream , in which three years pass as they slowly drift towards Europe and make their homes in the rivers , lakes and pools , far distant from their place of birth .
7 Then the fore and hind wings , bending under the additional stress of the turn , beat against one another making an audible rattle that you can easily hear as you sit watching them make their circuits over a pond .
8 The suitability of candidates is assessed , in part , by those who already sit as judges how make their assessments on the basis of the candidates ' ability as an advocate and since those advocates come , in the County Court in the main and in the Crown and High Court exclusively , from the ranks of the barristers it is they who are selected .
9 I am conscious how , whenever we come to one of these sad anniversaries in Northern Ireland , those who have participated in Northern Ireland affairs in the past make their contributions to the current debate .
10 He must go now , to the apartment block , and make his calls on the tenants .
11 When the various occult organisations get wind of the non-existent secret 's existence , of course , they take it in deadly earnest and will stop at nothing to discover it and so make themselves Masters of the World .
12 The first which establish themselves by chance in a particular spot , tend , by the mere occupancy of space , to exclude other species — the greater choke the smaller , the longest livers replace those which last for a shorter period , he more prolific gradually make themselves masters of the ground , which species multiplying more slowly would otherwise fill .
13 Make your objections to the respective councils , the CCS and the Scottish Office .
14 Guideline 20 : Make your requests/demands in a clear , firm and confident manner .
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