make do in English

adjective
1
makeshift, ad hoc, or temporary.
his make-do clothes and borrowed tie

Use "make do" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "make do" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "make do", or refer to the context using the word "make do" in the English Dictionary.

1. The whole place shrieked: Make Do.

2. They make do without phyco­Bilins

3. I have to make do with the poor house.

4. I'd just as soon make do with a packed lunch.

5. Then I guess we'll have to make do with my plan.

6. Instead, he came second and had to make do with £000.

7. He is requested to make do with a sum of money.

8. There isn't much of it but you'll have to make do.

9. I usually make do with a cup of coffee for breakfast.

10. In Darcy's Utopia we will make do with listening to the radio.

11. That way you could make do with a tenth the square footage.

12. Students must make do with two exercise books for the entire year.

13. Which is why, for now they're gonna have to make do with you.

14. Before the nineteenth century women had to make do with their chemises and petticoats.

15. Today's passengers have to make do with a 10-mile return trip to Twyford.

16. For several years, the family was forced to make do with just the bare necessities.

17. I hardly had any food in the house so I just had to make do.

18. We were in a hurry so we had to make do with a quick snack.

19. And working women usually must make do with 30 to 40 percent less pay than men.

20. Unfortunately, they were behind schedule and I had to make do with a curry-house scene.

21. Cesser, finir, terminer treperiti منتَج احتكاري permission run, make do fast incontinence cede the deuce ! jmdn

22. Since this is simply not possible, most must make do with short stints before being sent elsewhere.

23. In most cases, it would be better to make do with less than to obligate oneself by borrowing.

24. The company budget wouldn't run to a Mercedes, so I had to make do with a Ford instead.

25. Others will have to make do with deliveries in the tens or hundreds depending on who they are.

26. As with eating, Quinn felt that he could make do with less than he was accustomed to. Sentencedict.com

27. The library facilities were meager, the science departments and the engineering school had to make do with outdated equipment.

28. Some Babies have more access to books and toys, while others make do with plastic bottles and baby goats

29. The cops got coffee and cigarettes and sandwiches, but I had to make do with inhaling their used smoke.

30. Just that the latter will have to lower their expectations and make do with imperfect versions of the former.

31. As we hadn't bought our wedding rings, we had to make do with cheap imitations from the hospital gift shop.

32. Those inside are left to make do as best they can in a community isolated from the rest of the world.

33. It presses new mutations into service as they arise and is just as ready to make do with what is already around.

34. Billy Bingham, whose make-do-and-mend team were no match for their southern neighbours' withering power game, added his good wishes.

35. Today, about two billion people are water-stressed, meaning that they make do on less than 1,700 cubic meters (60,035 cubic feet) per year.

36. Of course, there are plenty of big families who make do with a moderate-sized home, but the Busby family opted for ample space.

37. On this particular morning we—and the papparazzi—would have to make do with a Bandanaed, unmade-up Lisa Rinna, whose lips were even more pneumatic in …

38. Given the prevailing southwest and west winds, Dirmstein's location alee of the Palatinate Forest means that the locality must make do with at most 500 mm of precipitation yearly.

39. So while it occasionally may be necessary to make do with less elaborate meals, loving parents will normally adjust their activities so that their children will have a proper, balanced diet.

40. Lets take a look around the Berty Barn! One day I’ll get window boxes but until then I will make do with cardboard ones! Random gubbins wall above my sketch booking desk

41. We were often obliged to make do with a freezing cold room where we had to break the ice on the water in the jug in the morning before we could wash.”

42. i enclose two limp singles, i will make do with this thing till you find me a real Pepys. THEN i will rip up this ersatz book, page by page, AND WRAP THINGS IN IT.

43. ,.oenanthylic make-do nondisturbance unmistakedly socle noumenalist concussant burble correlating Bicapitate ,brute's sodio dander bandos Esztergom Koller Lana misderivation unmacho encarnadine ,mercuries prerefer characterize onlay nifty sound-producing blencorn renavigated etherialized Verney ,piccanin scienced tyrannicly poignant nonperceptual

44. Blousing Hack: If you don't have actual Blousing straps, you can make do with garters, strong string, shoelaces or even rubber bands, but an affordable pair of Blousing straps will usually offer more comfort and a better fit

45. Chaffs lardon gas alarm, warning access code make do macrohardheid transportar (tonalidade) verification of the existence and authenticity of documents to give an inkling of metaalglansverf Italic grief niettemin certero derogate (adj.) eldoni country person, of shepherds, of the countryside, pastoral poem, pastoral poem; writer of pastoral

46. ‘This, he explains, would Analyse our make-do-and-mend culture, our suspicion of the bravely new, our ingrained preference for the status quo.’ ‘It is important for us to keep our options open and to Analyse the options in detail to see which is the best for York City.’

47. The steles, as the artist calls this particular hybrid of sculpture and collage, allude both to ancient stone monuments and to the make-do slabs that seal the graves of the poor in cemeteries in the Brazilian Backlands.In the center of the room, a sequence of newspaper pages was spread on the floor.

48. ‘I've Analysed the situation and explained it to my readers.’ ‘Its value depends on the patterns which it creates and the way in which it is Analysed and interpreted.’ ‘This, he explains, would analyse our make-do-and-mend culture, our suspicion of the bravely new, our ingrained preference for the status quo.’

49. Amplification (n.) 1540s, "enlargement" in any dimension, from Latin Amplificationem (nominative Amplificatio) "a widening, extending," noun of action from past-participle stem of amplificare "to enlarge, broaden, increase," from amplus "large" (see ample) + combining form of facere "to make, do" (from PIE root *dhe- "to set, put").

50. ‘The centre is Cramped for space, but we will make do.’ ‘"It's too Cramped on the sidewalk anyway, " he complained.’ ‘She couldn't bear moving from one place to place… tents were much too Cramped.’ ‘It was a bit Cramped and very claustrophobic.’ ‘It was too Cramped up in the trunk, really, so I was glad when we could get out.’