Example sentences of "made [art] [noun sg] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 As we have made the choice of stations more sensitive , particularly in Scotland , the system itself will be more sensitive .
2 At the same time , rising rates of divorce and remarriage have made the division of assets within families more complex .
3 This is all the more necessary because , although some facilitating devices such as information agreements may be made the subject of prohibitions , the majority of them appear to escape these .
4 This means the settlor ( or the spouse of the settlor ) ( s742(9) ( a ) ) who will have made the transfer of assets and perhaps any individual who had been associated with the transfer of assets ( Vestey v IRC [ 1980 ] STC 10 , overruling Congreve v IRC ( 1948 ) 30 TC 163 ( HL ) ) .
5 I always was , and have been ever , a devoted admirer of the fairer sex , but after you have made the acquaintance of men like Christopher Marlowe , you really ca n't trust anyone .
6 She 'd made the deadline with minutes to spare .
7 In part the reasons are technical ( the typewriter and camera — and now the computer tape — have made the keeping of records easier ) , but it is also a result of the increasing complexity of social organization .
8 Fifteen separate routes have been made the responsibility of managers whose chief aim is to satisfy their customers .
9 Furthermore , while ‘ logically ’ it might appear that at least from summer 1941 only Hitler could be blamed for the extension and prolongation of the war , a sufficient platform had been constructed by years of propaganda and ideological indoctrination to buttress the transfer of the blame to Germany 's external enemies — the Bolsheviks , the Jews , the British , the Americans — or to internal incompetence , naturally stopping short of the Führer , as when Field Marshal von Brauchitsch was made the scapegoat for mistakes in strategy and provisioning on the eastern Front in the winter of 1941–2 .
10 In addition , we saw that if Christianity was to be made the source of values this would create a logical inconsistency in Professor Hayek 's defence of the spontaneous order .
11 Massive infrastructural investment undertaken by UDCs has made the marketing of developments much easier and development costs lower .
12 Curiously , it is today 's liberalised fashion atmosphere which has made the language of clothes become ever more subtle and essential to master .
13 Modern technology comes to the rescue here , however : solid-fuel handling systems , developed by British Coal , allow automatic fuelling from an outside coal store ; de-ashing systems have improved , making the job quicker and easier ; smokeless fuels have made the burning of fires possible even in cities ; and some modern solid fuel stoves , which can be installed in front of a fireplace , burn so efficiently that they can be used in smokeless zones .
14 Simon , having made the joke about passports , commented that ‘ that sounds terribly racist ’ , only to add that the immigrants were the real racists : the West Indians hate the Asians , and the Asians hate the West Indians .
15 Her books , among them Wood and Garden ( 1899 ) , Home and Garden ( 1900 ) , and Colour in the Flower Garden ( 1908 ) , were widely read and followed in Britain and her ideas were taken up by Mrs Francis King , a founder of the Garden Club of America , who recognized her as having ‘ made the planting of gardens in the English-speaking countries one of the Fine Arts ’ .
16 The NRA noted ‘ a welcome trend towards the reporting of incidents on industrial sites … but several regions indicated that complex water surface drainage systems , and wrong connections of foul sewage and industrial waste outlets into the surface water drainage system , have made the investigation of incidents on industrial estates very difficult ’ .
17 The OAS had previously made the lifting of sanctions dependent on the return of Aristide to office .
18 The review had made no mention of children with special needs .
19 The campus was fenny-flat , laid out like a kind of chess-board , redeemed by an imaginative water-gardener who had made a maze of channels and pools , randomly flowing across and around the rectangular grid .
20 In all four schools , participation in the project had made a range of departments and a number of individual teachers look closely at their existing library resources for the purposes of stock editing and selection .
21 I 'm not really computer literate , I 've probably made a botch of things , and will most certainly use incorrect terminology ; please forgive !
22 A WOMAN told yesterday how her life is being made a misery by youths who know she is defenceless .
23 At last there 's hope for the many hundreds of children whose lives are made a misery by birthmarks .
24 Other investigations have made a link between events and onset of physical disturbances such as an infarct , streptococcal infection , and gastrointestinal disorder ( see Craig and Brown , 1984 ) .
25 Once he had made a crown of poppies for her hair and a daisy chain for her neck , and she had danced all the way home , feeling like a princess .
26 Q I can knit in double jacquard and have made a couple of garments , but would very much like to knit a single motif .
27 Within three and a half seconds he 'd made a couple of marks on the paper and shoved it back .
28 Philip Bennet the second was a great friend of Ralph Allen , who , having made a fortune beyond realms with his stone quarries , began to build the gigantic Palladian palace in the adjoining Prior 's Park .
29 Rather than having made a fortune in tips tonight , she had actually come up ten dollars short .
30 If , however , you find you have made a mistake with contributions after your P14 ( End-of-Year Return ) has been sent to the Inspector of Taxes , you have two alternatives :
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