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Example sentences for "has made"

  • He has made me believe in true love; I never did before!

  • People often try to meet again and never do--haven't you noticed that?

  • And I listened with interest while Mr. Harland put his former college friend through a kind of inquisitorial examination as to what he had been doing and where he had been journeying since they last met.

  • And rather than rise to Light again, it has made of itself a discord opposed to the eternal Harmony.

  • For if it had been defended by proper valour, as are Germany, Spain, and France, either this invasion would not have made the great changes it has made or it would not have come at all.

  • The castle of Milan, built by Francesco Sforza, has made, and will make, more trouble for the house of Sforza than any other disorder in the state.

  • Dauphiness-Bellona, in her special and in her widest sense, has made exit, then.

  • Necessity, who is the mother of industry, has made me act, and have recourse to desperate remedies in evils of a like nature.

  • We have to be what our birth, which decides, has made us in entering upon this world.

  • I thought it glorious to be able to communicate to him the overtures which his father has made me, and the project they suggested to me.

  • It has made me wise, an honest man and an atheist.

  • He has made me hear it often since, but I have not been able to accustom myself to it yet.

  • He has also expressly recommended me to treat you with the tenderest consideration; he has made me feel that I am responsible for you to the world, and that the world will hold me to a strict account.

  • It has made us all feel quite dreadfully at home!

  • Johnson was to come, and no doubt he has made a dinner, and invited a company, and boasted of the honour he expected to have.

  • Sir, he knows nothing; he has made up his mind about nothing.

  • Take it; for it has made me sick, and I don't care what becomes of it.

  • Perhaps this was the thing that has made you so angry with us all; for you never have come to see father since that evening.

  • Only you may imagine how impatient it has made me to see these accursed seals which prevent me from going to look at the gun.

  • And unfortunately he has made up his mind," said Dionysia, "as M.

  • Count Claudieuse is about to pay with his life for the effort which he has made to place his evidence before you.

  • A certain journalist, having no better objection to raise, has made thereupon a complaint in which he grieves over the lot of those poor peasants who are more maltreated by the law than their cattle.

  • The most curious part of his book is in the select collection which he has made of objections proposed by certain incredulous persons, which he answers, as may be imagined, triumphantly.

  • Blanqui, repentant, as it seems, at having taken this first step toward socialistic ideas, has made haste to retract his words.

  • Is not this to exclude Almighty God from the worlds he has made?

  • In that time it has made, by reason of the detritus brought down by the Nile, a distinctly-marked encroachment on the Mediterranean.

  • Are we not excluding Almighty God from the world he has made?

  • Her dual form of government--her allegiance to her two sovereigns, the political and the spiritual--has made her at once the leader and the antagonist of modern progress.

  • He loses sight, by degrees, of all common sense and feeling in the petty squabbles, intrigues, feuds, and airs of affected importance to which he has made himself an accessory.

  • He is therefore tolerated by all parties, though he has made himself by turns obnoxious to all; and even those he abuses read him.

  • And it appears to me that with propriety it acquires this character, as an instance of that superiority with which mind predominates over matter, by contracting into one whole what nature has made multifarious.

  • Happy he who, like Ulysses, has made an adventurous voyage; and there is no such sea for adventurous voyages as the Mediterranean-- the inland sea which the ancients looked upon as so vast and so full of wonders.

  • He has made a phenomenal success financially, he has powerful associates in financial and business circles, and is master of his time for any purpose to which he chooses to apply it.

  • Mr. Bryan, my opponent, has made a remarkable speaking tour through our State.

  • Mr. Seward is now the Minister for Foreign Affairs in the States, and it is hardly too much to say that he has made himself a laughing-stock among the diplomatists of Europe, by the mixture of his ignorance and his arrogance.

  • He has made maps of his empire, including all the continent, and has preached the Monroe doctrine as though it had been decreed by the gods.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "has made" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    has already been mentioned; has already been pointed; has already been said; has already been stated; has been already observed; has been already said; has been already stated; has been pointed out; has done; has got; has made; has never; has not; has seen; has the; has written; hast been; hastened away; hasty glance; hasty movement; individual variability; many questions; small farm; strength and; that sense; throw light