Example sentences of "[vb base] to [be] make [adj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But they seem happy to attribute orderliness and completeness to others , and indeed seem to be made happy by doing so .
2 It may be that greater financial resources require to be made available in order to increase public awareness of the National Library and its functions by increased advertising and other publicity means .
3 I 'm not suited to fatherhood and I had n't any wish to be made ridiculous by paternity suits .
4 ‘ Legally , twenty-five per cent of the shares have to be made available to the public .
5 Not only does the specialist equipment have to be made available to disabled people ; training and advice on how to use the equipment should also be provided .
6 Second , the general results of audit have to be made available to managers so that they can take remedial action if necessary , which may mean initiating an independent audit .
7 For ethnographers and sociolinguists considering linguistic interaction , these elements and others have to be made explicit in the analysis of features such as code-switching and role-relationships .
8 Any reasonable expenses incurred by the person who gave notice have to be made good to him by the company and recouped by the company out of any fees or other emoluments of the directors in default .
9 Iraq appears — perhaps because of security considerations — to have withheld some of the data it would normally have reported , leaving gaps in the IMF 's tabulations which have to be made good from less direct sources like the analyses conducted by the Bank for International Settlements ( BIS ) and economic commentators .
10 Ideally this type of assessment begins when the patient is admitted to hospital so that there is adequate time for planning if special arrangements have to be made prior to the patient going home .
11 Protests have to be made public to be effective .
12 In order for most families to benefit from the types of prevention activities described , they probably need to be made available to all families on a voluntary basis , and they probably need to be relatively non-obtrusive and in essence , common .
13 The ’ Harriet was hungry ’ example may be only nine words long , but it nevertheless demonstrates many aspects of knowledge that need to be made explicit to a computer before it could be said to understand .
14 Pupils need to be made aware of the subtler uses of language , and of the appropriate uses of figures of speech .
15 Staff need to be made aware of the indicators that trigger off their own prejudices — snotty noses , nose- and ear-rings , coloured hair , leather jackets , elaborate and expensive school uniforms , gum-chewing — all those things that set off an expectation of a certain kind of behaviour , regardless of the individual young person 's personality .
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