Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [conj] make [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 The dominant tone is of jubilation , not the hysteria that makes me swoon in Prince .
2 Death will quickly draw the veil and make us see how near we were to God and one another , and did not sufficiently know it .
3 It 's simply the tiredness that makes me so unresponsive on many occasions . ’
4 It 's not the money that makes me happy .
5 Flimsy metal rails and plastic counters jar with the handsome Neo-classical forms of the galleries ; large panels have been built in the entrance of the three main galleries , blocking the views and making them look smaller , and because space is at a premium , the paintings are sometimes crowded together .
6 The beauty about making the batsman hit into the V is that the bowler can pack his fielders in that area of the field and make it extremely difficult for the batsman to score more than a single .
7 If only he could overcome the dread and make it his .
8 The rainwater washed away the topsoil and made it difficult to replant trees .
9 He came back full of the experience and made us all quite envious , but he was able to see first hand what went on at the business end of the oil industry and picked up some useful knowledge for future reference when dealing with the oil men .
10 Mr McTavish , studying Nails closely , thought the boy was ill and took him into the kitchen and made him a cup of tea .
11 ‘ If you want some coffee before you leave , go to the kitchen and make it yourself .
12 And the worry that makes you all tense …
13 You said , do you actually eat the products that made you allergic Paul ?
14 You work lightly so as not to draw in the knitting or make it lumpy and you could also undo lightly worked stitches more easily .
15 's Thus the women who stayed at work sometimes acquired the skills that made them " fully " trained in the trade .
16 The second fact is that Labour , despite the recession and its junking of almost all the policies that made it unelectable in the '80s , has not made a significant advance .
17 There was a lot of tooth-sucking for a while as he tried to get me to say more and that was almost funny , given that it was the tooth-sucking that made me think of it in the first place , suddenly thinking .
18 In modern times interest has centred around what it is about the owl that makes it the target for this hostile treatment .
19 The interior spaces of the wedge-shaped building were converted to suit their new function by artists Robert Irwin and Richard Fleischner , with architect David Raphael Singer , whose particular brief was to retain the all-glass walls of the building while making it a suitable and secure venue for displaying works of art .
20 ‘ Our combined weights on the outside of the cradle pushed it into the side of the building and made it tip , ’ said Warel .
21 None of the new features take away control from the user or make it harder or more complex to use , a strategy which some other vendors would do well to emulate .
22 But it was the driver that made him halt abruptly .
23 The nip of alcohol causes the blood vessels to dilate and so warm the skin and make us comfortable in spite of being out in the cold .
24 THIS is such a delicious offering , of the kind that makes you chuckle in recollection on the way home , that I do not really want to give the game away by saying too much about what goes on .
25 VINNY Jones last night sensationally revealed the secrets that make him soccer 's hardest man .
26 ‘ I 'm to be slightly too clever , the hare to your tortoise , so that you can plod past me half-way round the course and make me look a fool . ’
27 Not those kind of relaxants but something just to relieve the tension and make her feel calmer .
28 The fear is that the police may have overmuch regard for public order considerations and impose such stringent conditions on holding the march as to make it ineffective as a form of protest .
29 Sucking the wool and making it damp enhances the lanolin odour , and this keeps the cats contented and fully absorbed in their sucking and chewing .
30 We should not be bothered by safeguarding entrenched institutions , nor about winners or losers , but by how better to persuade tourists to come to Scotland and how to help the industry that makes them welcome .
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