Example sentences of "[that] [noun] makes [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The ape that Alison makes of Absolon , the excluded potential lover ( 3389 ) , re-emerges as John the clerk after Alayn has jumped into bed with Malyne ( 4202 ) , while throughout the night the miller , with his skull " " piled as an ape " " ( 3935 ) is left in the same position . |
2 | The move that Barthes makes to a second order signification has important methodological implications . |
3 | Two other requirements that Beccaria makes of punishments for them to be effective are that they should be prompt and certain . |
4 | This is not a conditional statement , reflecting some deal that God makes with us : ‘ You forgive first , then I 'll forgive you . ’ |
5 | During the trip to India — which , British elections permitting , should take place within a few months — Baker will emphasise government support for any satellite deals that India makes with private industry , for example , the state could provide loans to pay for the work . |
6 | So the demands that system makes on the network are correspondingly modest . |
7 | The evidence of this study indicates that while simplicity in initiating proceedings , informality in surroundings , and procedural flexibility are valuable qualities worthy of preservation , they should not be used as a justification for denying the contribution that representation makes to tribunal decision-making processes , nor the need of appellants to have cases advocated on their behalf . |
8 | The British reader has only to listen to the sounds that protest makes in his own streets , to the cruel , brutal voices that bellow over loudhailers about injustice and the disadvantaged . |
9 | This , though , unlike the identification that Henry makes in the course of the play between himself , his cause and his country , is not an identification easily shared by mere onlookers . |
10 | The most promising are the definitions that equate pragmatics with " meaning minus semantics " , or with a theory of language understanding that takes context into account , in order to complement the contribution that semantics makes to meaning . |