Example sentences of "[adj] [pers pn] [modal v] make [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I 've got that I 've got that I must make a note of this . |
2 | Okay , you can and say , hey , well dear I 'll make a living and pay your rent . |
3 | For at the age of 49 he can make the noise of five different kinds of lorry changing gear on a hill . |
4 | Find out early on how dark you can make the hall . |
5 | But we were convinced we could make the series without the need to accept a ‘ marriage-offer ’ — another favoured Channel Four model — which would mean an established production company would absorb us and our ideas and take the commission . |
6 | and remember — when you 're adolescent you can make a lot of trouble for yourself . ’ |
7 | It has been put to me that when the Act comes into force on 1st May 1975 it will make a nonsense out of the children 's hearing system . |
8 | It sounds fairly taxing , with being on night call , but I 'm sure you 'll make a success of it , and hope it brings you a lot of satisfaction . |
9 | The snow was so deep we could make no progress , so we went around into Dividal instead . |
10 | Coach Gary Reid is confident they can make an impact . |
11 | ‘ I 'm sure it will make a difference , ’ said Steve Wright , a ballroom dancer who happens to share his name with a Radio One disc jockey , a man who probably never played a Glenn Miller record in his life . |
12 | ‘ Where that can be comfortably done without infringing the other objectives then I am perfectly prepared to see how flexible we can make the franchise . ’ |
13 | Mrs Bourne has always said if she could prove chemicals were responsible it would make the tragedy easier to bear , as well as ensuring other children did not become needless victims . |
14 | First I must make a confession . |
15 | In classical physics there is , in principle at least , no limit to how gentle we can make the perturbation . |
16 | Dulcie Howes , who wrote that comment to me , had told the Cape Town critic Denis Hatfield at the time that John would never really be a dancer but that he had ‘ such a remarkable eye for balletic pattern , an imagination so vivid , and such an ear for music in relation to movement ’ that she was certain he would make a choreographer . |
17 | they gave them a three year trial period , to see how attractive they could make the service . |