Example sentences of "make by [noun] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 This , of course , relates to the point made by Johnson-Laird earlier : that an effective ( i.e. indexical ) use of language does not depend on knowing precise ( i.e. symbolically complete ) meanings .
2 The decisions being made by businesses now were the ones which would show the way out of the recession .
3 Privatisation removes these constraints and also allows managers to improve the speed of decision-making , essential in a rapidly changing market — decisions may now be made by managers rather than by lengthy referral to government departments .
4 Credit card payments can be made by telephone on .
5 I wish to confirm the details made by telephone on by a member of my staff .
6 Such approaches are best made by telephone rather than in writing and will only rarely be successful .
7 In the county court or High Court emergency applications may be made by telephone out of court hours and an application form must then be filed at court within 24 hours ( FPR , r4.4(4) ) .
8 It contained the Knole sofa on which St Agatha had reclined in West Kensington ( too large for Laura 's tiny flat ) , several lowering pieces of reproduction Jacobean furniture donated by Kitty ( 'Your father loved it but I ca n't bear it , it 's so threatening ’ ) , hundreds of books on shelves made by Peter out of bricks and planks and the unmistakable overlying detritus of family life .
9 If we are to understand the significance of subject specialization , then we must take the choices made by women seriously : we can not assume that the student who chooses physical science is somehow ‘ right ’ while the student who chooses the humanities is somehow ‘ wrong ’ .
10 Coincidentally the results of another recently released study , commissioned by several local authorities , Passenger Transport Executives and the National Park Authority , shows that 65% of journeys between Sheffield and Manchester are made by rail rather than road .
11 ‘ But the German system appears to have no place for the producer — it 's like a final , ridiculous culmination of the auteur theory , which insisted that movies are made by directors rather than producers — and so it has no room for that kind of creative argument . ’
12 Petherbridge mentions Chekhov and Shakespeare , but , for him , theatre is something made by performance not writing .
13 It would be appreciated if payment can be made by cheque where ever possible .
14 Clearly , I heard with disappointment the announcement made by VSEL yesterday .
15 Oddly though , mine appears to be made by Fairy rather than Microsoft …
16 The ( tax free ) capital gains made by owner-occupiers generally far exceed any possible savings that they might make from their income .
17 Interfax news agency later released remarks made by Starovoitova shortly before her dismissal , and possibly connected with it , in which she accused the authorities of a pro-Ossetian bias in their response to the emerging conflict in the North Caucasus [ see below ] .
18 The approach taken here exemplifies what emerged in our discussions during the conference as a major theoretical orientation : a view of human action — peacefulness or violence — as the outcome of choices made by people actively in pursuit of particular purposes and goals , choices made and enacted within particular psychologically and culturally constituted realities which they themselves are actively constructing ( see Buckley , Howell , O'Nell , Overing , Gibson , Howe , Campbell , this volume ) .
19 The majority of these , three thousand one hundred and twenty three , were made by applicants already in the U K who presented themselves at United Kingdom Immigration Nationality offices to request asylum .
20 Even the strenuous attempts made by historians over two decades to make their subject more relevant to the needs of late twentieth-century Britain seemed to be overshadowed by the debate over empathy .
21 Officials see the main thrust as : more freedom in basic research to allow decision making by scientists rather than government more encouragement for private enterprise to invest in research a push to persuade state research bodies to do more contract work for industry and rely less on government funds .
22 In December 1923 , the key decision had been that made by Baldwin not to resign immediately .
23 Cleanliness and neatness are always the keynotes in such descriptions , whether in the country or the town , a point implied by Mrs Gaskell but made by Dickens quite explicitly .
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