Example sentences of "[art] [noun] can make [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Ideally , it is a major feature of this type of product , and one for which the advertised brand is actually superior : but it could be some general characteristic which , by getting in first and appropriating it to itself , the brand can make its own .
2 Thus , the university can make its most fruitful contribution to democracy through the teaching of an English which places the student in direct touch with the values embodied in the national literature .
3 Another important development will be compact disks that can not only be read but also written to , so the user can make his own amendments to the data .
4 THE parties can make what agreement they wish about the time , place and manner of delivery and payment .
5 My country is full of distinctions of this kind , and in the congenial climate of Oxford they flourish to form a semantic jungle through which only the natives can make their way .
6 Instead of buying a car every second year the motorist can make his purchase every third year so creating a considerable fall in sales .
7 And there 's some doubt as to whether the council can make its tenant farmers enforce the ban .
8 Skilful questioning of the child can make him tap sources of knowledge he did n't know he had .
9 The child can make his own cards of his own errors .
10 John Plamenatz announced enthusiastically that " the voice of the people is heard everlastingly " through the spokespersons of these organizations , and Robert Dahl believed in the 1950s that the United States possessed " a political system in which all the active and legitimate groups in the population can make themselves heard at some critical stage in the process of decision " .
11 If you 're recording , plug it into the desk and the engineer can make anything sound good , so whether you use one pickup , two pickups , one amp , two amps , Marshall , Crate , anything .
12 The children of the Indians are saved , to be sold or given away as servants , or rather slaves for as long a time as the owners can make them believe themselves slaves .
13 The court can make whatever order it considers appropriate and can impose conditions .
14 Their vents are pressed together so that the sperm can make its way into the female .
15 Anjuu Misra , actress , explains that the schedule can make it difficult to learn lines .
16 Environment Guardian analyses this week 's proposals All muck but little money POLLUTION : The plans read well , says Julie Hill , but there is little evidence that the Government can make them work .
17 The government can make its value judgements about distribution or equality and can pursue its views about the desirable degree of vertical equity without impairing the efficient functioning of a free market economy .
18 They should be based primarily on resource materials , which might include samples of language data ( spoken , written , literary , non-literary , standard , non-standard , English and other languages ) and facts and figures about languages in Britain and around the world , and associated activities which are essentially concrete and problem-based , so that the pupils can make their own enquiries , and so that the teacher can learn alongside the pupils .
19 The medium is particularly well suited to close-up shots and the viewer can make his assessment of the situation from behind the player 's arm .
20 If you are employed by a company , you can make the contributions yourself , the company can make them , or they can be shared .
21 A board can make its own arrangements for considering such applications ( subs .
22 The truth is , of course , that no hypnotherapist can make you do anything .
23 His very intelligent scrutiny of a role can make him seem too detached , too much the performer of a plan . ’
24 But she knows that only a miracle can make her six-month-old son beam back .
25 Thus a man can make his love more and more brilliant throughout life .
26 Only a judge and a jury can make him guilty .
27 Bereavement can have devastating effects on our defensive cells , but even something as minor as taking an exam can make us more vulnerable to infection .
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