Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [noun sg] [noun] make it " in BNC.

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1 The draught coming in through the ventilation ducts made it tremble continuously .
2 Now that the portability of the microfilm system makes it an attractive product , the unresolved controversy may resurface .
3 Detailed analysis of the BARB data makes it possible to develop the next , valuable set of information .
4 Furthermore , mixing up used disposables with the rest of the household rubbish makes it difficult to recycle them afterwards .
5 What features of the city plan make it a pleasant place for outdoor recreation ?
6 The magico-religious content of many of the seal images makes it likely that their owners treated them as amulets as well .
7 The frequent changes resulting from postings and the demands of the duty roster make it difficult to ensure the continuity not only of a ‘ uniformed ’ organist , but also of a choir .
8 And the Shelley party were near at hand — though the fluctuations of the time scale made it hard to determine whether they would recognize my name if they heard it .
9 The calve muscles at the back of the shin bone make it possible to raise the heel .
10 The use of the term legatarius makes it much harder to rely on the explanation that legare has a broad sense ; there was after all an accepted term , fideicommissarius , for the beneficiary of a trust .
11 However , the first level graphics combined with the soundblaster sounds make it a good disk to have .
12 Ernest Bevin 's entry into the wartime coalition made it even less likely than before that the bulk of trade-union officials would tolerate the Communists let alone support them .
13 Within these coastal poleniers an enormous amount of sea ice could form and then is removed to the north dumping enormous amounts of salt into the shelf water making it very dense and setting up the stage for the deep sinking associated with Antarctic .
14 Ever since the days it had been called Kingstown , it had been a lovely place to live ; tropical palm trees along the coast line made it seem like somewhere much more exotic than it really was .
15 Neighbours beat the dog with a metal bar to make it release its grip .
16 Hounslow 's headquarters have been at the Church Meadow ground for 70 years but sharing with a cricket club makes it impossible to lay a synthetic surface there .
17 Although this test does not provide the statistical and normative data for making comparisons with the performance of ordinary children found in some other tests , the use of imitation as an elicitation strategy makes it .
18 Charles dashed past my aircraft — I followed in haste but was too far from the slit trench to make it .
19 Continuing demand in Edinburgh for water from the Union Canal made it necessary for the new aqueduct , which would eventually carry the canal over the bypass at Hermiston , to be constructed without interruption to the flow in the canal and the contractor elected to use an open channel diversion capable of passing 237 litres per second .
20 The screens should be removed from the reception desk to make it more friendly and less like a bank .
21 These divisions within the labour movement made it a less influential force on the side of social reform than is often thought .
22 Perhaps our account of the wizardry of energy juggling involved in the tunnelling process makes it not altogether implausible that a doubling of the height to be scaled could immensely increase the difficulty of the transaction .
23 The reversal of the conventional speech/writing hierarchy which is implied in the term archi-écriture makes it impossible to see any use of language , written or spoken , as being determined by presence , intention or representation .
24 The distribution of PCNA in the cell cycle makes it a useful marked for proliferating cells : increasing through G 1 , peaking at the G 1 /S phase interface , decreasing through G 2 , and reaching low levels ( which are virtually undetectable by immunocytochemical methods ) in M phase and quiescent ( G ) cells .
25 The ‘ gruelling ’ , or at least rigorous , element in the approval process made it frequently a long one , and was often accompanied by the traumatic shock or disappointment of rejection .
26 Many experts in the auction rooms make it their business to hang out with aristos waiting for the time Uncle Marmaduke 's Van Dyck has to bite the dust , so they are privy to the ‘ who 's just acquired a new mistress whose florist is Cartier ’ chatter .
27 Both potting department sides beat teams from the dipping house and glost warehouse in a league table to make it to the final .
28 Once formed the stony surface , often termed desert armour , will tend to protect the surface , very much as the coarse material in a stream bed makes it often less erodible than the banks .
29 ‘ In fact , it was only after some debate that the organisers decided to carry on with the event , and some changes had to be made to the canoe course to make it easier for the rescue boats to assist competitors .
30 Customs state , in their official publication , Single Market Report ( Special Edition , Christmas 1992 ) , that amendments to the draft regulations make it clear that the register refers only to temporary movements , ie for a period not longer than two years .
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