Certainly he would make a fine attorney-general, endowed with elastic, mischievous, and even murderous eloquence, or an orator of the shrewd type of Benjamin Constant.
To set down in writing the circumlocutions, oratorical precautions, protracted conversations, and honeyed words glossed over the venom of intentions, would make as long a book as that magnificent poem called "Clarissa Harlowe.
What a change it would make in all his views and prospects for life!
Every now and again, one of the birds, recovering its senses in the hurly-burly, would make a curving swoop downward past the rows of windows below, and triumphantly catch in its beak something that had been thrown into the air.
And if you were independent, Edith--if you had any amount of money--what difference do you think it would make to you?
He is fixed in my memory by his struggles to live up to his new position, more especially by the efforts he would make to break himself of certain habits of speech.
It was just the way I expected he would makean ending.
I don't believe as it would make a scrap of difference one way or the other.
George Storefield had been very good, and told Aileen that, whatever happened to us or the old man, it would make no difference to him or to his feelings towards her.
It would make men of us, at any rate, and give us something to think about in the days to come.
As for my own part, such is my Christian charity towards my neighbours, that I could wish from my heart everyone had as good a voice; it would make us play the better at the tennis and the balloon.
A good edition, of course, would make no attempt at amalgamating these.
He found it hard to get to sleep, that night; and was kept awake long after he had planned how he would make up to his mother for having received her "legend" so freezingly.
Colonel Johnston: ``Do you know what motion I would make if I were a member?
He read over those damning extracts, punctuating them with chuckles; he would make an example of that minister who had found it convenient to adopt a course diametrically opposed to the principle involved in his early speeches.
He had written to her to say that he would make such an attempt.
Together they went to see Mr. Lincoln, and Lamon asked the President if he would make him a promise.
But look at him, doesn't he look as if he would make a magnificent President?
This named vexed her a great deal, she wished to be called Preati, which was her family name, but it was all in vain, and the only concession her friends would make was to call her by her Christian name of Juliette.
I left the money in his hands, telling him to lay it out on masses on my behalf, feeling sure that he would make quite a different use of it, and he thanked me in a tone that persuaded me he would be his own priest.
I endeavoured to console them, and assured them that all my misery would soon come to an end, and that we would make up for lost time.
I came back on the following day, and the very first thing he told me was that, to his certain knowledge, there was an immense treasure hidden somewhere in the Papal States, and that he would make up his mind to purchase the sheath.
If I had only myself to consider, I would make her my friend, because I'm seasoned in the ways of the world, and she could influence me only as I chose to allow her.
Shelley didn't like it because she was going to school in Groveville, where Lucy, one of our married sisters, lived, and she was afraid I would make so much work she would have to give up her books and friends and remain at home.
He again thought of his own affairs and definitely decided he would make a change in his life, that he would leave Winesburg.
Now he had decided that like the men whose stories filled the pages of the Bible, he would make a sacrifice to God.
Then he became afraid that the drunken boy would make a mess on the floor and helped him into the alleyway.
You can see what a piece of work it would make of their sympathies.
If there were a building on it as big as York minster, as big as the Boston Coliseum, the great telescopes like Lord Rosse's would make it out.
So we agreed that on some fair night when the Astronomer should tell us that there was to be a fine show in the skies, we would makeup a party and go to the Observatory.
And passin' p'serves and jelly and cake 'At would make an ANGEL'S appetite ACHE!
Where I found a heart in pain, I would make it glad again; And the false should be the true, Did I know what poets do.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "would make" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.