33 examples of what make this in sentences

What made this the more serious was the weakness of the regular garrisons, all of which, put together, numbered only 1,627 men.

Never has the lighter and gayer side of Oxford life been depicted with so much humour and fidelity; and what makes this achievement still more remarkable is the fact that Cuthbert Bede (to give Bradley the name which he adopted for literary purposes and made famous) was not an Oxford man.

What makes this fellow here?

What made this negligence less criminal than else it must have been thought, was the condition of the roads at night during the assizes.

What makes this episode especially interesting is the conjecture that has been thrown out, and which seems intrinsically probable, that the 'lady' is Spenser's own Rosalinde, by whom he had been, jilted, or at least rejected, more than a quarter of a century before.

"If I 'ad the woman what made this dress 'ere," gasped Mrs. Kybird, as she stopped with her hand on her side, "I'd give her a bit o' my mind.

"If I 'ad the woman what made this dress 'ere," gasped Mrs. Kybird, as she stopped with her hand on her side, "I'd give her a bit o' my mind.

What makes this Generation of Vermin so very prolifick, is the indefatigable Diligence with which they apply themselves to their Business.

What made this the more striking was that Aunt Lucile's normal mood to-day impressed Mary as rather aggressively sell-contained.

What makes this not quite certain, however, is that the contract of July specifies a greatly reduced quantity and scale of statues.

But what made this conduct irresistibly ludicrousthough painful to any gentleman to witnesswas the mockery of make-believe gallantry exhibited, in seating all the ladies before any gentleman was allowed to enter; the upshot of which was, that they gradually created a comparatively beaten path for the gentlemen to get in by.

But what makes this old yellow-leaved book a treasure-volume for all time is the inscription on the first fly-leaf, in the handwriting of a man of genius, who, many years ago, wrote thus on the blank page: "To MARIANNE HUNT.

What makes this splendid monument so interesting is the assertion made by nearly all authorities on the subject that these enormous works must have been excavated without spade or tool other than the puny implement called a "celt."

What makes this business still more remarkable is, that the Administration knew from the reports of our consuls and from the experience of our captains that the force of the pirates was insignificant, and that they were wretched sailors and poor shots.

What made this vast difference, but this: That one was accustomed to have what they called or cried for; the other to go without it?"Locke, on Education, p. 55.

New York is crowded with voyagers, and men of mileage to the moon, but what made this powerful unlettered boy look for the inside of things?

What makes this thing so heavy? Mrs. Bradley (as she opens a drawer and takes out a half-dozen patent flat-irons and a handle).

What makes this procedure the more inexplicable is that both these songs are classed by Miss Fletcher among the Wa-oo-wa-an or "woman songs," concerning which she has told us that "they are in no sense love-songs," and that usually they are not even the effusions of a woman's own feelings, but the compositions of frivolous and vain young men put into the mouth of wanton women.

On the contrary, what makes this romance so peculiarly objectionable is that it is a master work of that kind of fiction which makes vice alluring under the sophistical veil of innocence.

What makes this admission the more significant is that Professor Rohde, in speaking of "sentimental" elements, does not even use that word as the adjective of sentiment but of sentimentality.

What makes this evidence the more conclusive is that Rohde's use of the word "sentimental" refers, according to his own definition, to egoistic sentimentality, not to altruistic sentiment.

What makes this Generation of Vermin so very prolifick, is the indefatigable Diligence with which they apply themselves to their Business.

What makes this Treatment the more extravagant is, that the young Lady is in the Management of this way of Fraud, and obeys her Fathers Orders on these Occasions without any Manner of Reluctance, and does it with the same Air that one of your Men of the World would signifie the Necessity of Affairs for turning another out of Office.

" "I don't see what made this one come so near," said Shirley, "unless it was our fire last night.

What makes this journey different from other journeys?

33 examples of  what make this  in sentences