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125 Sentences With "made do"

How to use made do in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "made do" and check conjugation/comparative form for "made do". Mastering all the usages of "made do" from sentence examples published by news publications.

These people were not poor by their own standards; they simply made do for themselves, and often made do quite well.
The edits made do not directly correct a biological defect.
Mr Bevin says that the savings made do not matter.
But we made do with everything that they gave us.
Some people have made do with multiplayer video game LAN parties.
Board of Education, the justices made do with six amicus briefs.
She had made do with a ceramic pot for a toilet.
I found what I could among the "regular" clothes and made do.
In 2014 Samoa received $458 per person; India made do with $3.69.
They made do with only basic toilet facilities, sometimes not even that.
Infectious disease prevention, emergency preparedness and primary care made do with less.
Hospitals and other emergency facilities have made do with back-up generators.
While we mostly made do, we bought a few things on the road.
While God made do with just ten commandments, Goldman Sachs has 14 business principles.
In fact, the decisions that are made do not even appear to be decisions.
While clients have made do with the crumbs, the managers are still dining well.
People made do with what little they could find, but it was never enough.
English was not her first language, and Spanish wasn't mine, but we made do.
What's the single deal you made do you think was most successful during that?
Ms. Nguyen made do with plastic wrap brushed with a little green food coloring.
On Monday, Allia made do, using her mother's smartphone to log into Google classroom.
On Monday, Allia made do, using her mother's smartphone to log into Google classroom.
She made do with what she had, and it really made Stu's death stand out.
Atlético, too, made do with far less than its chief rivals, Real Madrid and Barcelona.
Nothing about the hotline felt especially urgent; providers had made do without one for decades.
She's made do — and she's ready to face the next thing just as she is.
They made do with plates of rice and beans, paired with alternatives like stewed eggplant.
It was the privileged insights into neurosurgery which made "Do No Harm" such a remarkable book.
I made do with the Behmor, which makes incredible coffee but had a prickly relationship with Alexa.
He made do with his new machines, although he could not make the exact screws Apple wanted.
Doctors and nurses made do in a small gymnasium as families of the injured pleaded for help.
CreditCreditRozette Rago for The New York Times Once upon a time, we made do with less television.
They must go through the life processes that humans who were born, rather than made, do to survive.
Both of my parents made do with the situation they had, trying to make a life in America.
Polls, and an online petition, revealed this to be unpopular, and he made do with a "charter" instead.
Working class black residents often didn't have the same means, so they made do with what they had.
Others made do by ripping the YETI logo from their cap or chucking a tumbler into the trash.
While I waited for my landlord to send a guy, I made do with an electric pressure cooker.
I want to be clear that the statements they made do not reflect the views of ArenaNet at all.
To cut costs, they deferred orders and made do with planes they previously would have swapped for newer models.
For five years they made do on tumbledown Eldridge Street, but they've now migrated to 230 East 2311th Street.
Before scoring her tan Teddy Bear coat last fall, Ms. Rothschild made do with a $150 model from Topshop.
Thus far she'd made do with chicken breast, which is cheaper than the beef called for by the script.
I made do by cobbling together a sheaf of maps of varied detail that I printed off the internet.
So the armed forces have made do with small upgrades, most recently modifying its rifle ammunition to fly faster.
Some went into transitional housing, built by the government, while others doubled up with relatives or made do with tents.
That said, Tom Brady has more than made do with a slew of whoever's available at receiver in the past.
For his installation "La Disolución de la Geometría" (2014), he made do with ground coffee, raw sugar and powdered milk.
I made do with the content of the bran-shell and reconciled on the notion that at least I had tried.
The cool kids were all T9-texting on their Motorola Razrs (and the rest of us made do with our knockoffs).
As the recent study demonstrates, even if desired edits are perfectly made, do we know what all the effects would be?
Another wildfire three years ago left her homeless, she said, and she has made do living in a tent ever since.
Diners made do with a parade of meals at local or national chains, punctuated by the occasional steak in a pretty room.
Mr Trump makes clear that in fact there is a choice to be made: do you follow EU regulations, or American ones?
For a few years now, we've made do with fan-made, ad-hoc solutions such as Steam's Tabletop Simulator and Hero Lab.
Nik, our bass player, lost a string just as we got under way, but made do with the three he had left.
I made do with what I could find in the day room: Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul and poems by Jewel.
The superb organist Kent Tritle made do with the electric facsimile provided him, with big speakers in the back of the stage.
A lot of my friends were in the same boat, so we made do with what we had (or shoplifted what we wanted).
They made do without him, surging at the start of the second quarter and taking a 29-point lead in the third quarter.
" In his speeches in Jerusalem he made do with vague platitudes about how "both Israelis and Palestinians seek lives of hope for their children.
She spoke of seeing shopping carts full of meat and turkeys earmarked for the bishop's family while others made do with rice and beans.
But in his speeches in Jerusalem, made do with vague platitudes of how "both Israelis and Palestinians seek lives of hope for their children".
The vast mass of the people made do with a single name, which in a village is quite enough, since everyone knows you anyway.
For its first 43 years, the Court made do with six justices; and for three years in the mid-19th century, it had 10.
Both were mainly off-limits to women; Mrs May made do with a dowdier college and relaxed by watching "The Goodies", a particularly dire comedy.
Until now, the company has made do with Alien Blue, which started out as a third-party app before being acquired by Reddit in 2014.
If that city by the Ohio River was to be his Elba, he made do well enough, going 14-3 in his first year there.
But with no brush in sight, the star made do with what she had on hand — a plastic fork — and shamelessly combed it through her hair.
They made do at first, the younger ones wearing the older girls' hand-me-downs, but it was difficult for them to wear Makayla's old clothes.
While The Office star didn't have the exact pink cellphone to complete the look, she made do with an iPhone covered with a bright pink case.
And, either way, we made do, because it is the job of reporters to get the facts — and present them fairly and accurately — regardless of the obstacles.
Wanting to train, yet without a gym affiliation, he made do on his own, filling up a sack with dirt and rice husks for a punching bag.
Only Solange, whose plane was delayed, missed the outfit change, but she made do with a Telfar top of her own that she'd packed in her suitcase.
And he wasn't kitted out with the latest technological marvels or a souped-up Aston Martin; he made do with found objects or whatever car he could steal.
"Whiskey Tango Foxtrot" (Paramount) made do with about $7.6 million in ticket sales, continuing Ms. Fey's box-office struggles when she has tried to expand beyond pure comedy.
At others, a single grave can hold three — perhaps the logical last port of call for a family of three who made do with a one-bedroom apartment.
Sending a claimed 82 horsepower to the rear wheels, the e-Bulli's electric motor seems mighty puny, but remember that the bus originally made do with just 43.
Plenty of residents had to rely on the city's limited bus system, while others hitched rides or made do with minimal selections at gas stations and similar stores.
In case you haven't figured it out, Clapper is aimed at kids, but there weren't any around at E3 so the adults made do — and had a great time.
And as much of a fan as I am of the pinup-girl look, I had just cut my hair short, so I made do with a baby pompadour.
Watchmen so thoroughly deconstructs the foundational precepts of superheroes that most subsequent writers have made do either by poorly imitating its technique or outright ignoring elements of its critique.
Like many Americans, Obama's parents made do with what they had and poured their energy into their children, who they hoped would fulfill the families' as yet unrealized aspirations.
Sheep-cheese pioneers like David Major of the Vermont Shepherd farm made do, gradually improving their flocks' milk yield by crossbreeding with European dairy stock from Canada and England.
His credit card allowed him to check in a bag free, but southern California doesn't require much bulky clothing in late August so he made do with a carry-on.
So she made do with a few pieces of furniture and put off figuring out what to do with her wardrobe and a wide assortment of equipment for her various interests.
So, I finally got a voice recorder and telephone pickup mic; I've used it already for a few interviews and honestly, I don't know how I ever made do without it.
They made do with meager food rations — "they gave them just any old thing — scraps here and there," Endo's daughter Terry DeRivera said in an interview — and Endo sometimes became ill.
So we made do with sucking on a bunch of spicy tamarind candies that I'd lugged back from a recent trip to Thailand, where I was reporting on the chef Pim Techamuanvivit.
The Musketeers made do without Sumner, mostly courtesy of Davis, who had three assists and four points in six minutes helping the Musketeers go on a 10-213 run to regain control.
So while Trump likes to crow, in a hallucinatory fashion, that gays love him, we made do in June with a tweet from his outsourced conscience, by which of course I mean Ivanka.
Iran and its allies, which include Hezbollah, had so far made do with condemnation in response to the U.S. sanctions, said Nasrallah, before adding that this was "not a permanent and fixed policy".
For a museum scene in the movie, a low-budget affair that was shot in nineteen days, they made do with a single white wall, hung with reproductions approved by the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation.
To that end, many of us made do with anything that even slightly resembled our personal narratives, even if it was inauthentic, problematic or straight up trash (see: Katy Perry's "I Kissed a Girl").
At Petroamerica Pagán de Colón, an independent living apartment building in San Juan for people over 62, residents have made do with limited water and 14 floors of stairs to climb for crucial goods.
Blue-collar workers and families have been displaced to cheaper housing on the fringe, but many creative types have made do by finding alternative living arrangements like industrial property, recreational vehicles and even boats.
Plaid Cymru made do with backing from Bootlegger, a Wrexham AFC fan and vlogger who describes himself as an "alcoholic Welshman, living the dream on jobseeker's allowance" on Twitter, where he has 213,000 followers.
Whereas salt and sunlight can cause plastics physically to break apart into smaller pieces, chemically the hydrocarbons linked together into the polymer chains of which plastics are made do not spontaneously decompose into other compounds.
Unfortunately, because of plastic's propensity to break, the museum has no examples to include so it has made do with accessories: sunny yellow Mary Quant boots, and bright tights in shocking pink, purple and green.
Don't just rebalance as a function of the gains particular sectors have made; do it also according to age and the fact that you and many other investors are 10 years older since the Great Recession.
While their white contemporaries enjoyed M.L.B.'s tidy schedules and scrupulous statistics-keeping, the black players of the early 21972th century made do with a mixture of official and unofficial contests across borders of league and nation.
It wasn't his first choice, he said, but other sets in the studio were already booked, so he made do, decorating the stage in the style of the 20th century, and bringing in opera singers from Beijing.
For example, consumers made do with General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) and third generation (3G) internet data speeds in the past but they are now demanding for Long-Term Evolution (LTE) services for high speed access, he noted.
I could have taken out a loan to buy a nicer or newer car, but instead I made do with the Civic while making a "car payment" into a high-yield savings account for the next three years.
With his wife, Priya Chandra, and their daughter, Madina, now 3, he made do with eating on the couch or the floor, just as he had as a bachelor chaplain in residence living in the same N.Y.U. dormitory apartment.
"The allegations made do not reflect the culture or the work ethic of over 1,200 employees across Balfour Beatty Communities who are dedicated to maintaining the highest standards of conduct and service at all the military facilities," it added.
At the Lowell Hotel on the Upper East Side, where he talked over bourbon (Eagle Rare) and licorice-flavored cigarettes, he easily made do with the imitation heritage furnishings: damask-covered chairs, cushy divans and a cherry wood desk.
With FIFA having suspended payments to CONCACAF, the governing body for soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean, the delegates accustomed to a five-star life made do with meal vouchers and glasses of water in the lobby.
While most of us are content with Word or Google Docs, screenwriters have gotten used to Final Draft's unique key combinations and styling but made do with software that was, to be fair, far behind the state of the art.
And although the script had him falling in love with a humble woman from his home town, he thought that a proposed kissing scene was unnecessary (and potentially embarrassing), so he and his co-star, Isabel Glasser, made do with meaningful looks.
It presents a reminder of just how many people seemed to live in cars then — and the cars were certainly big enough — while others made do with park benches, or failing that the sidewalk, perhaps with head inserted into a box for privacy.
So researchers made do with limited data on the virus's transmission rate in places like China and Singapore, and from just a few identified cases in the US. Lover, for example, extrapolated from a single case at the CPAC conference in late February.
The price was so right that when my now-husband and I first moved in together, we made do rather than looking together for an apartment that would more reasonably accommodate two grown human beings, two dogs and our then-hypothetical children.
There is no way to predict where anger will lead if the promises Trump made do not materialize, and if the numbers of those marginalized by hyper competition — by automation, offshoring, skill mismatch and the forces of globalization — continue to increase inexorably.
He made do with money from freelance translating gigs, before landing a job in 2016 in the Moscow office of the International Republican Institute, or I.R.I., which receives tens of millions of dollars annually from the United States government to promote democracy.
Many have made do, often traveling more than 20 miles to fill buckets and plastic bins at distribution centers or to drink and bathe in streams and rivers, despite the EPA's warnings that these waterways have been flooded with untreated sewage since the storm.
Of course he was an Oscar nominee; he's one of the most significant directors in American film history, the guy who made Do the Right Thing and Malcolm X and Inside Man and 25th Hour, and, honestly, insert your Spike Lee favorite of choice here.
Years later, while working in the fashion industry — first as a marketer in Vancouver, then at an online retailer in New York — Kim made do with regular visits to local Korean bathhouses and drugstores where she would admire household bar soaps by brands such as Basis and Dr. Bronner's.
Right, but when the decision has to be made, do I put the 85-year-old with underlying conditions in the I.C.U., who might have a 50-2000 chance, or do I put a 23-year-old in the I.C.U. who's come in with respiratory problems who has a 2000 percent chance?
Right, but when the decision has to be made, do I put the 85-year-old with underlying conditions in the I.C.U., who might have a 50-50 chance, or do I put a 45-year-old in the I.C.U. who's come in with respiratory problems who has a 60 percent chance?
Right, but when the decision has to be made, do I put the 85-year-old with underlying conditions in the I.C.U., who might have a 50-50 chance, or do I put a 0003-year-old in the I.C.U. who's come in with respiratory problems who has a 60 percent chance?
In a communal, nigh utopian spirit, guests share in the labor and often bring dishes of their own, rehabilitating the idea of the potluck — which has nothing to do, etymologically, with potlatch: It derives from the 16th-century English pot-lucke, in which unexpected guests made do with whatever was already in the pot.
Immigrant cooks, often living in poverty, have always made do with what's on hand, like the Japanese-Americans rounded up and shipped to internment camps during the Second World War, who improvised rice balls with rations of Spam, and the Korean and Filipino-Americans who, having survived on canned goods in the aftermath of war, eked out household budgets by deploying hot dogs in kimbap and banana-ketchup spaghetti.
He delivers the story of Bruce — in digestibly short chapters — via an informally steadfast Jersey plainspeak that's worked and deftly detailed and intimate with its readers — cleareyed enough to say what it means when it has hard stories to tell, yet supple enough to rise to occasions requiring eloquence — sometimes rather pleasingly subsiding into the syntax and rhythms of a Bruce Springsteen song: "So we all made do," he writes about his parents' abrupt move from Freehold to California, in 1969, leaving him behind.
" And in Tuesday's paper, W.H. correspondents Ashley Parker, Josh Dawsey and Robert Costa have this description of how it works: "Trump's sustained attacks against Cummings reveal the extent to which the president stokes a grudge, immerses himself in Fox News and spews back its more right-wing content into the world — forcing his allies to scramble to respond..." BTW: They reported that "White House aides have privately discussed sending Trump to the city, but no final decisions have been made..." Do you think Baltimore is thankful for Trump's "attention?

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