Example sentences of "[modal v] make [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Whatever we may make of this , it is interesting to observe that Professor Hartman of New York has established a link between those who suffer from this nocturnal disposition and a high level of creativity .
2 Whatever we may make of its influences , Leonard is clear that he ‘ never recovered ’ from its dénouements ; its ‘ illumination of human behaviour ’ ; its horror ( which he termed ‘ metaphorical ’ ) .
3 Whatever we may make of Leonard 's Judaism , he is a man seized by its traditions , its scriptures and their imagery .
4 To say , as Mr Hibbert did , that statisticians can not publicly dispute any misleading use politicians may make of official information is a weaselly argument .
5 Readers may make of this what they will .
6 It may make for some good headlines , but De Niro certainly does n't come on like a tycoon , talking about his company as not so much a business , more an ‘ artistic community ’ where people can freely exchange ideas .
7 This may make for difficulties in terms of care .
8 It may make for easier government and public convenience to restrict the tradition of marching and assembling for protest , but it would be a dangerous and a foolish idea to believe that public protest can somehow be laid aside as belonging to a bygone age .
9 A planted tank may make for healthier fish .
10 With some banks , details of any charges your bank may make for operating your account and how they are calculated , will be shown on a separate statement .
11 The position of BAT leaders as assessors , funders and evaluators of projects and their role as the key link to other sectors of government may make for administrative efficiency .
12 Adversary politics and changes in government may make for " exciting politics , " but they produce " low-credibility Government strategies , whichever party is in power . "
13 The first ingredient for success is that managers are sensitive to the impact that changes may make to the lives of those concerned .
14 The private householder having work done to his own property is not required to make deductions from any payments he may make to subcontractors .
15 This is not to say that the contributions which social scientists may make to solving particular technical problems , or enlarging the sphere of rational decision making , should be dismissed altogether ; only that they have to be seen in the wider context of political contestation and choice .
16 Relevant proceedings as defined by s93(3) means any application made or proceedings brought under the Children Act , any statutory instrument made under the Act or any amendment which the Act may make to any other statute .
17 The minimum donation which an individual can make under the Gift Aid is £600. the total donations which an individual may make under Gift Aid in any tax year must not exceed £5,000,000 .
18 NatWest Home Improvement Loan Protector is administered by National Westminster Insurance Services Limited , who will deal with any claims that you may make under the policy .
19 Section 241 lists some of the types of orders the court may make under section 238 or section 239 .
20 The Secretary of State for the purposes of the Act ( as amended ) may make under s3A " regulation as to the contents and form of notes of agreement , invoices and similar documents " ( the Unsolicited Goods and Services ( Invoices etc ) Regulations 1975 ( SI 1975 No 732 ) ) .
21 When official conservation often does not work , part of the problem may lie in the assumptions which the conservationist , government servant or politician may make about the cause of failure .
22 And in this instance , he is only too aware of the kind of judgements I may make about him as a child reader , and tailors his reply accordingly .
23 Young people frequently dismiss remarks which older people may make about their impending or eventual death .
24 Lord Denning MR said : Every member of the community is entitled to carry on any trade or business he chooses and in such manner as he thinks most desirable in his own interests , so long as he does nothing unlawful : with the consequence that any contract which interferes with the free exercise of his trade or business , by restricting him in the work he may do for others , or the arrangements which he may make with others , is a contract in restraint of trade .
25 In his poetry , Wordsworth uses the language of faith years before his ‘ prose mind ’ can accept Christian doctrine ; this is why his ‘ conversion ’ is impossible to date , and why there is so much divergence between the poetic and prose statements he may make at any stage in his progress .
26 The nature of the demands which new programmes may make on teachers has already been discussed .
27 One could wish that to celebrate this moving occasion ( for it is at least a partial farewell ) a master of verbal portraiture were at hand ; though so elusive is personality , so unlike the impression that the same person may make on different observers , we might well have no great faith in the verisimilitude of the sketch , if produced .
28 This chapter will suggest contributions you may make towards minimizing patients ' possible anxiety .
29 reasonable contributions you may make towards transport costs if you 're taken to or from the hospital by a local voluntary car scheme or similar arrangement
30 Thus , consideration should be given to the way in which policy goals may be effectively translated into political and legal reality , based on both a realistic perception of the obstacles that have to be overcome and an accurate assessment of the contribution which lawyers and litigation may make in promoting desirable social change .
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