Example sentences of "make [pron] [adv] attractive to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Size , colour and perfection of form help to influence the value attached to pearls , but it was their ‘ orient ’ which made them outstandingly attractive to men of many civilizations .
2 In Britain booming domestic sales of videocassette machines have brought the prices down and made them more attractive to institutions .
3 Last week , NCR added some new features to Top-End that should make it more attractive to customers moving from mainframe-based systems or mixing mainframe and open systems environments .
4 ‘ We have found tenants for all these units , ’ says Gerry Gallagher , who is the project manager , ‘ and we have other plans for improvements to the village which will make it more attractive to visitors .
5 Well do you think actually so to make it more What could be done to actually make it more attractive to traders ?
6 They 're opening the game up and making it more attractive to spectators . ’
7 The School has taken a number of steps to maintain these numbers by continual monitoring and updating the programmes it offers ; the Financial Studies degrees have recently been re-structured to make them more attractive to students wishing to enter the financial services industry ; Mathematics continues to expand the portfolio of the degree combination it offers .
8 A proposal to require plain generic packaging for all cigarettes , which the Victorian Anti-Cancer Council 's Centre for Behavioural Research has shown makes them less attractive to adolescents , has been deferred for a year .
9 Study of evolving populations of ammonoids has produced very fine subdivisions of Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks , and their only disadvantage , curiously enough , is the feature that makes them so attractive to collectors .
10 The apparent failure of LIFFE 's ECU bond contract brought about a review of the product 's specifications to make it more attractive to hedgers , speculators and arbitrageurs .
11 What makes it both attractive to users and even more misleading is that the promoters of the technique tend to use a number of methods to produce ‘ norms ’ for , in particular , ‘ preference shift ’ , but also for various attention measures .
12 The policing of processions , marches , demonstrations and meetings of various sorts represents a considerable call on modern police resources , especially in the Metropolitan Police area of London , whose central location makes it particularly attractive to groups wishing to express a point of view in public .
13 It 's this very difficulty of tracing musical gear which makes it so attractive to thieves .
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