Example sentences of "make [adj] [noun sg] for [pron] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 If the Loyalists are so determined to live under British rule , it would make economic sense for them to be assisted to move to the mainland .
2 Mrs Beamson 's eight-year-old son has been diagnosed as suffering from severe dyslexia and she claims the county 's education policy will not make adequate provision for him at secondary school level .
3 Conductors could make some money for themselves by selling lists of well-known passengers on their trains to representatives of the Associated Press .
4 You do n't have to like , make any room for it at all , and you can start doing paint layup and but you can do magazine pages .
5 But she 's now making another name for herself as the brains behind the first horse register in the country .
6 ( d ) Pensions and insurances Now that payments for goodwill to outgoing partners are fast disappearing , partners must address themselves to the question of making financial provision for themselves in retirement and their families in the event of their death .
7 If , for whatever reason , a husband initially commands higher rates of pay than his wife it makes economic sense for him to ‘ specialize ’ in paid work and let her shoulder the brunt of the partnership 's unpaid chores ( Becker , 1981 , 1985 ; for a critique see Owen , 1987 ) .
8 The opportunities provided in the clinical area for teaching on a one to one or small group basis should enable the teacher to be aware of at least some of these differences in her students , and to make some provision for them in her teaching .
9 I imagine that Silver Star Navigation makes more money for you in one afternoon that G.W. Fashions is likely to make in a year . ’
  Next page