make common cause make conscience make contact with make conversation make-debate make default make do makedom make down make due make ends meet make...
See also: Appendix:Collocations of do, have, make, and take advauntage (obsolete) From Middle English avantage, avauntage, from Old French avantage, from...
See also: Appendix:Collocations of do, have, make, and take and hâve (stressed) IPA(key): /hæv/ Homophone: halve (some accents) Rhymes: -æv (unstressed)...
intransitive) To manage, get along; to do (well, badly etc.). [from 17th c.] Oh, you were on a TV game show? How did you make out? 1931, Hart Crane, letter, 5...
adö, and -ado From Northern Middle English at do (“to do”), infinitive of do, don (“to do”), see do. Influenced by an Old Norse practice of marking...
Middle French (se mettre) en devoir (de faire) (“(to make it) one's duty (to do), to endeavour (to do)”) (from Old French devoir, deveir (“duty”)). (UK)...
what does that have to do with the price of tea in China what does … mean what do I know what-do-you-call-it what do you know what do you make the time...
inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations. Translations to be checked English Wikipedia...
even where does this bus go where does this train go who's robbing this coach who writes this stuff with this you call this you can't make this stuff...
legally obligated to do. We don't have a duty to keep you here. 1805, 21 October, Horatio Nelson England expects that every man will do his duty. 1910, Emerson...