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6. make
- Have you got any comment to make about that?
- ...the use of small amounts of nitrogen in making certain steels.
- Isn't it time we made a move?
- Decision-making is an art.
- Attempts were made where resources were available.
- The government have made up their minds that they're going to win.
- Sir Michael has made it very clear indeed.
- No effort is made to cater for the needs of the elderly.
- Old age is sickness only if one makes it so.
- I think I made the wrong decision.
- This scene makes one realize how deeply this community has been afflicted.
- Did you make these yourself?
- I changed the plan and made the talks open to everyone over twelve.
- Who made the bed in the room upstairs?
- Make your own decisions.
- It hasn't made any difference.
- We've made little progress.
- Numerous attempts have been made to obscure this fact.
- Very many women have made their mark on industry.
- He made me feel like a complete idiot.
- Nobody must get in here and make a thundering nuisance of themselves.
- The plastic has to be compatible with the body tissues that make contact with it.
- He made several important discoveries. The most interesting of these came from an examination of an old manuscript.
- It made her seem less like another of Theodore's possessions.
- ...the little things that made life slightly less intolerable.
- If it will make you any happier, I'll shave off my beard.
- I make a lot of mistakes.
- There is a third factor besides farming and herding in the spread of man-made desert: deforestation.
- It's easy to make friends because you're with people of your own age.
- Over 120,000 Ugandans have made this journey.
- I make notes in the back of my diary of things to be mended or replaced.
- ...dresses made of paper.
- She made a signal.
- She made a remark about the weather.
- The newspaper had made disparaging remarks about his wife.
- We have made progress in both science and art.
- Benn made a sincere personal appeal to the Committee.
- He made the shortest speech I've ever heard.
- She made a number of relevant points.
- Work experience allows students to make more effective career decisions.
- Try not to make so much noise.
- The cricketers made a public protest against apartheid.
- You made the right decision.
- She made a remark about the weather.
- Now and then she makes a comment on something.
- I haven't made a full confession sir.
- I'll make some enquiries for you.
- I made a secret signal to him.
- McEnroe was desperate to make one last big effort to win Wimbledon again.
- He made an attempt to calm down.
- It was put to him that he was making a serious charge against Mrs Thatcher.
- They agreed to make a few minor changes.
- The lights made me sleepy.
- He'll make a good president.
- Wood made up 65% of the Congo's exports.
- Willie's jokes made her uneasy.
- He said waltzes made him dizzy.
- In 1910 Asquith made him a junior minister.
- More and more people are coming to appreciate the contribution which Muslims make to our society.
- My father made me go for the interview.
- `Will you have your whisky, or do you want dinner straight away?'*`Whisky. Make it a large one.'
- Why make a point of it?
- Imagine, for example, an assembly line worker in a factory making children's blocks.
- Neither of them was making any sound.
- The estimated sales will hardly cover the cost of making the film.
- He too seldom makes the first greeting.
- Ought you to make some notes about it?
- `You'll make a lot of money.'*`I shall one day.'
- Computer interviewing and rudimentary computer diagnosis must eventually lead to computer decision-making.
- Could you make out her bill, please?
- Martin, could you make us a drink?
- I shall make some enquiries and call you back.
- I won't leave you. You can't make me!
- Mr Smith will have to make the funeral arrangements.
- People who come in with enquiries are often very shy about making them.
- I've made some poor decisions lately, but I'm feeling much better now.
- Up till now, the most extraordinary remark I remember was made by you.
- Eileen was accompanying her father to visit friends made on a camping trip the year before.
- ...the mistakes which women make most frequently.
- They had a long-standing commitment to making a weekly cash payment to mothers.
- They can go on making losses, year after year, without fearing that they will go bust.
- That coat must have cost you more than I make in a year.
- Thomas made an appointment to see him immediately.
- Never in history had technology made such spectacular advances.
- Border could hardly make himself heard above the din.
- ...making the pay system more directly related to performance.
- I went into the kitchen and began to make the dinner.
- I made it there astride one of these courageous little donkeys.
- Simon wondered if he should make conversation.
- They will think we are making a fuss.
- He told funny stories and made everyone laugh.
- The decision to go had not been an easy one to make.
- He expressed the opinion that Kitchener should be made War Minister.
- The fact is that a happy person makes a better worker.
- They make allegations which, when you analyse them, do not have too many facts behind them.
- It's been making money ever since it opened.
- If the lawyer made a long, oratorical speech, the client was happy whether he won or lost.
- A great storm had brought the sea right into the house, so that they had been forced to make their escape by a window at the back.
- We have to make it work in the way that we want it to.
- Her pink dress and her frilly umbrella made her look as though she had come to a garden party.
- She shook as if she were crying, but she made no sound.
- ...the man that made it.
- At one point I made up my mind to go and talk to Uncle Sam. Then I changed my mind, realising that he could do nothing to help.
- The legal position for both worker and employer is now as fair as the law can make it.
- Because the medicine is both expensive and in great demand, huge profits can be made.
- Outsiders aren't supposed to make those kinds of jokes.
- There might be an uncomfortable moment or two when Gwen learned of his intention, but she was not the kind to make a fuss. In any event, he could handle the situation, which would not be a new one.
- We accept that thought is a common property of the human race. But we cannot make the same assumption about machines.
- It makes a click like the lid of a tin may do.
- All she ever does is make jam.
- He found it hard to make friends.
- There comes a time when you have to make a choice.
- Actually, I do know why he made the solicitors write that letter.
- It had always been felt that foster parents should make no profit*the job should be done for love alone.
- Oh, he wants us to make films as well, does he?