Example sentences of "he [modal v] make [pers pn] " in BNC.
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1 | He may make me feel desolate , make my spirits sink , hide my future from me … still … |
2 | He should make it known within the company that this is one of his priorities , that the whole board supports it and that a percentage of the profits should be devoted to it . |
3 | And he should make it plain that Parliament will yield no further on the right of the British people to make their own laws , issue their own currency , set their own taxes and elect their own Government , free of foreign domination . |
4 | ‘ I do n't know if Bobby will break into the Great Britain team for the World Cup final against Australia in October , but he should make it for the next series and then hang on to the job . |
5 | Mr Fallon said : ‘ Mr Milburn could be taking jobs away from Darlington he should make it clear what his real campaign is . ’ |
6 | This means that , having discussed the problems with you , he should make you aware of the consequences of a continuing failure to live up to expectations and give you an opportunity to demonstrate an improvement . |
7 | ‘ I simply meant that if Silas finds himself in love with a woman who loves him in return , he must make her his own . |
8 | If there are no gudgeon pins available he 'll make them ; likewise pistons , push-rods or you name it . |
9 | ‘ Oh , he 'll make me look a hundred and three , ’ said Lucy . |
10 | ‘ He 'll make me — ’ |
11 | He has warned me he 'll make me suffer for it . |
12 | Then he 'll make her wash her face and we can have tea . |
13 | ‘ He 'll make it . ’ |
14 | ‘ He 'll make it , ’ Bodie said , and strained to catch her dying words . |
15 | ‘ Humber told me Red Leland thinks he 'll make it . ’ |
16 | Bremer has n't had anyone to torture in ages , so he 'll make it slow . |
17 | He looks tired , yes , but he 'll make it . |
18 | Do n't think he 'll make it Transfer Listed — speaks for itself I 'm afraid I 'm not too keen on any of them . |
19 | Go on that 's it , see that , we 've got an appointment , you know , well I know he 's in , I know he 's in Birmingham at ten , well he 'll make it to Stafford by half past , half past or quarter to eleven , wo n't he , he 'll do that ? |
20 | ‘ He 's alive — I reckon he 'll make it . ’ |
21 | The expedition organisers are still hoping he 'll make it to camp for and radio in at first light tomorrow . |
22 | The beast by candle-light ; the trip to bed where all the things you would n't do , have n't done , are things he 'll make you do , and things you 'll want ; and then the beast 's departure , out on his own , still smelling your smell but looking for fresh tracks . |
23 | If you go to Siward , he 'll make you fight , too . |
24 | Or he 'll make you worse ! |
25 | He might make me come back to London , and I could n't bear it . |
26 | He might make it back by four in the morning , once he 'd dumped the car . |
27 | If they have provided inadequate stewarding on previous occasions , for example , he might make it a condition that more stewards and better prepared ones are provided on the occasion in question . |
28 | He could make him a valuable new member of the gang , with Nancy as his assistant . |
29 | It was all very pleasant , and Cassie began to remember what she had all but forgotten : Just what good company Ben was , and how much he could make her laugh . |
30 | So how was it he could make her feel uncertain and inadequate , yet set her a-quiver with treacherous delight at his lightest touch ? |