Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] made [pron] " in BNC.
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1 | The long struggle to reclaim what was theirs has made them cold and deadly . |
2 | She has made him more of an Expressionist than he really was but she has realised an essential truth : that Heartbreak House is a deeply poetic play about the death of liberal hopes and the cracking-apart of a civilisation . |
3 | I started buying every issue of Tennis World after Capriati 's looks and sheer dedication in every match she has played , brought me into tennis and she has made me become an addict . |
4 | The centrepiece of her work is a flock of 32 sheep made from wire , a material she has made her own . |
5 | But whether or not the Queen Mother is out of step with public opinion on divorce , she has made it clear no one will tell her how to behave . |
6 | She has made it quite plain and understood — |
7 | ‘ She has made lots of friends and is joining all the activities such as swimming galas and the Brownies , ’ said Mrs Nicholson . |
8 | At first I had suggested that I should keep her company but she dismissed the idea at once : ‘ I am not a child , and I refuse to be treated as one ’ , and I guessed she wanted to be alone rather as a young girl might who sets out to post an imaginary letter , hoping to meet on the way the person for whom she has made herself beautiful . |
9 | She has made my position here in Hochhauser untenable . |
10 | She 's made 'im have . |
11 | Yah , now she 's made them out , shall we say we will take that one to share the load . |
12 | So did she say she 's made her mind up ? |
13 | She 's made me angry with her anger , and then turned it around so that I 'm eaten up with guilt because she 's been ill and I have n't noticed , and now she 's taking the blame on herself and making me feel worse than ever . |
14 | She 's made me think , think differently about … about gettin' on an' that , betterin' mesel' . |
15 | She 's made me more responsible and I 've done better in my exams and I 've worked at my English . |
16 | She 's made it up . |
17 | She 's made it clear that she is not about to be scared off by terrorist threats . ’ |
18 | It does n't take the detective skills of Lord Peter Wimsey to track down the novels of Dorothy L Sayers … she 's made it into the top shelf of crime writers . |
19 | This is just a friendly hi and then inside it says from I , and she 's made it into Irene . |
20 | Although Joanne clearly loves her daughter very dearly and feels that having her has made her more responsible , she spends relatively little time with her . |
21 | His finest things in this form date from his later years — ‘ Behold thou has made my days ’ can be dated 1618 and ‘ Glorious and powerful God ’ was probably nearly contemporary and the great ‘ O Lord , let me know mine end ’ of the long-lived though generally conservative Tomkins may be later still . |
22 | The book 's title comes from Psalm 60 : ‘ Thou has shewd thy people hard things : thou has made us to drink the wine of astonishment ’ . |
23 | He has made himself appear a poodle of the executive . ‘ |
24 | In this way by not acceding to anger and resentment , he has made himself into a better son . |
25 | He has made himself so by resolving never to make the same mistake twice . |
26 | Alistair erm he 's , he 's made himself er he has made himself coordinator . |
27 | It seems , then , that not only may an entrepreneur-producer be a monopolist because he happens at the same time to be a monopolist resource owner , he may be a monopolist because he has made himself a monopolist resource owner in the course of his entrepreneurial activities . |
28 | ‘ No man has ever seen God ; the only Son , himself God , who is in the bosom of the Father , he has made him known . ’ |
29 | The only Son , who is the same as God and is at the Father 's side , he has made Him known . |
30 | Kandel , trained as a psychiatrist , spent a period working on Aplysia with Ladislav Tauc in Paris in the 1960s , saw the potential of the organism , initially for the study of short-term processes such as habituation , and over the subsequent quarter-century in New York he has made its study peculiarly his own and that of the generations of researchers who have cut their teeth in this Columbia laboratory . |