Example sentences of "make it [adj] that he [vb -s] " in BNC.

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1 It is even against the wishes of the Hon. Member for Tayside ( Mr. Walker ) , because he has made it clear that he does not want Stagecoach to succeed in his area .
2 The 23-year-old back rower has now made it clear that he wants to play Rugby League in England this season after scrapping his contract with Australia 's champion club Penrith .
3 Kenneth Baker , the Conservative Party chairman , has made it clear that he intends mounting an attack on the Labour leader 's personal qualities .
4 Poststructuralists aspire to remove what they regard as the arbitrary distinctions between literature , criticism , theory , and philosophy , and Geoffrey Hartman has made it clear that he believes what he writes to be worthy of the esteem and attention normally given to ‘ creative ’ writing .
5 A director may have made it plain that he has a definite intention for a character , but the student may not always see this straight away .
6 I hope that the hon. Gentleman will make it clear that he has accepted that point .
7 In Washington this week Mr Ozal made it clear that he does not want either a Kurdish state or a divided Iraq .
8 Introducing his Scottish front bench team today , Mr Robertson also made it clear that he wants all forty-nine Scottish Labour MPs to be involved in developing policy and strategy .
9 Dworkin makes it clear that he considers the second principle to be the more fundamental one under a liberal conception of equality .
10 Calls , whether in respect of futures and options funds or any other product , must be terminated immediately if the investor makes it clear that he does not wish the call to continue .
11 He makes it clear that he believes ‘ that there are higher civilizations and lower ones ’ ; the notion of Empire is ‘ not necessarily an ignoble one ’ when it is founded on ‘ the notion of extending law , justice , humanity and civilization — with no other interest than glory , and no other motive than a sense of vocation ’ .
12 When asked whether he would support a constitutional change in Scotland if he did not have proportional representation , he said no ; so he makes it clear that he gives higher priority to the self-interest of the Liberal Democrats and a voting system that would help them than to the issue of principle on Scotland 's constitutional future .
13 Only where the person using the foul language makes it plain that he has no intention of resorting to violence , and there is no bystander who is likely to be provoked by what the defendant is doing , is no offence committed under this section .
14 Suppose , for example , that the police seek to remove a person 's clothing , or to take fingerprints when they are not authorised to do so , or persistently seek to question a person who makes it plain that he has no wish to answer , or seek to enter a house when they have no search warrant or a defective one .
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