Example sentences of "[noun sg] of [noun] [pron] [is] make " in BNC.

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1 Taxis refers to the kind of order which is made and which is imposed from without ; it is the order of an organization .
2 Only it 's so difficult judging what kind of impression one 's making , out here on one 's own . ’
3 A chargeable transfer is a transfer of value which is made by an individual and which is not an exempt transfer ( an exempt transfer would be , for example , a transfer to a spouse which comes within IHA 1984 , s18 or a transfer which comes within the annual exemption of £3,000 contained in s19 of that Act ) .
4 It 's just er a small section of foot of a footnote which gives an account of the history of the clause in er of the section in the er Police Act of nineteen sixty four with which we are dealing and of course Your Lordships will be well aware that we moved on from Section er from the Sections of the Police Act , we 're not dealing with them at all , we 're dealing with what has happened to those Clauses since and I thought perhaps Your Lordship might Your Lordships might be interested in the sort of guidance which is made available th so , so fortunately to us and so that we can have our minds very clearly focused upon the issues .
5 In doing this they have first cheapened the original process of selection which is made meaningless , and then , they shoved their heads firmly back into the sand .
6 Right at the heart of God 's choice of Israel it is made plain that God has a missionary purpose .
7 The novel shows , among other things , the disastrous effects of this philosophy on Mr Gradgrind 's own children , Tom , who becomes a thief , and Louisa , who nearly becomes an adulteress , and on the lives of working people in the city of Coketown which is made in his image , a dreary place containing :
8 So when he claims to have had glimpses of absolute Truth , it may be reasonable to assume , not that he has caught a glimpse of some kind of hypostasized Ultimate or extra-mundane entity , but rather that through his participation in a particular form of life he is made aware of the need to live and act in accordance with certain religious and ethical criteria and is informed by the spirit of what might be called dharma ( law ) , or ta ( moral law ) , or tao ( way ) but which he prefers to call Truth ( Satya ) or God .
9 So we find , for example , that men are like grass renewed in the morning but withered by the time of evening ( I 's 90.5 ) ; their days are like grass which is gone when the wind ( as here ) passes over it ( 103.15–16 ) ; the " son of man who is made like grass " is parallel to " man who dies " ( Isa 51.12 ) .
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