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488 Sentences With "make do with"

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

Sometimes, you need to make do with what you've got.
"You make do with what minutes you get," Magette said.
Many of those who returned home make do with little.
And when our income shrinks, we make do with less.
It's like having to make do with Ethel Merman humming.
Sometimes you need to make do with what you have.
You make do with what you have, and that's exciting.
He will have to make do with achieving just one.
He might have to make do with a coalition government.
She says you can make do with what you've got.
In the meantime, we'll make do with drooling over these photos.
You just have to make do with what little you have.
Sometimes, you just have to make do with what ewe have.
In the meantime, he may have to make do with less.
For now, they will make do with far more modest accommodations.
Until then, we'll make do with some bullet-stopping goo instead.
So some of those duplex apartments make do with skylights instead.
Instead, consumers have to make do with higher-charging local oligopolies.
Drs Drever, Thorne and Weiss had to make do with sharing $1m.
Absent genuine political and cultural influence, we must make do with empathy.
Guess you'll just have to make do with the pictures for now.
"We have to make do with what we've got," Tormund replies smugly.
So we'll have to make do with this: Congrats to Phil Kessel.
Too many parents must make do with less expensive, low-quality options.
Some might make do with a beater car for $215k on Craigslist.
Alternatively, you could make do with a late night fried chicken shop.
But we have to make do with the gifts she left us.
We were going to have to make do with a sloppy 10.
Some have to make do with what the public school system offers.
By Saturday night, people had to make do with what they had.
It's really mostly mediocre, but we all make do with what we have.
Passengers had to make do with a row of tents to check-in.
Most non-Touch games make do with clicking a trigger, which is serviceable.
So, for now, we'll have to make do with pre-recorded immersive video.
Fancy equipment and new planting techniques help farmers make do with less rain.
Then she and others have to make do with whatever they have left.
Health care services—both people and facilities — must make do with the leftovers.
But non-members will need to make do with 3-5 day shipping.
Residents have to make do with dialup or Wi-Fi from a library.
For now though, we'll just have to make do with this first single.
In our universe, though, we have to make do with what we have.
Moviegoers elsewhere will have to make do with whatever local multiplexes can provide.
But I had to make do with looking at my laptop screen instead.
But in the meantime, we have to make do with what we have.
A restaurant, for example, would make do with 10 employees instead of 11.
All other priorities from education to infrastructure must make do with the leftovers.
For now, they make do with the occasional phone conversation and text message.
In the meantime, governments will have to make do with what they currently get.
Until winter comes, though, we'll make do with these few morsels of inside information.
We'll see more companies figuring how to make do with fewer call-center workers.
Mere Clinton rallies make do with a few salesman offering campaign buttons and shirts.
The Republic of Ireland's 213m residents have to make do with something less appealing.
It's not just citizens — crops have had to make do with less water, too.
Make do with visiting them at least once in Seoul for an unforgettable night.
When desperate times call for desperate measures, you make do with what you got.
In those cases, customers might opt to make do with a so-so product.
Instead he had to make do with a worse one back in his village.
Twitter and Yahoo had to make do with a meagre 22014% and 2600%, respectively.
Our latest 360 video looks at how teenagers in Peru make do with sand.
At home, I make do with straight grated Parmesan and whole red-pepper flakes.
" Cue Tormund leering at Gendry: "We've got to make do with what we've got.
"The Terror" doesn't just make do with this already fascinating, though admittedly downbeat, story.
By 1988, Reagan's last year in office, they had to make do with $16,268.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of American women have to make do with far less.
And Clint Eastwood's "Sully" had to make do with one nomination, for sound editing.
Hirano had to make do with silver once again, having also finished second in 2014.
Until then, you'll just have to make do with those old Cheetos-dust coated sweats.
So consumers, despite their outrage, tend to shrug and make do with the status quo.
I figure I can make do with this for the week instead of grocery shopping.
Often, entrepreneurs view us as banks and think we can make do with 6% returns.
But if that's not good enough, you'll just have to make do with the memories.
The 16 other contenders vying for the Republican nomination had to make do with scraps.
Young adults bemoan costs and internet restrictions while older Cubans make do with meager wages.
Even those not working in traditional high-salaried careers make do with a frugal lifestyle.
In the meantime, Maps users will have to make do with the traditional map view. 
We just have to make do with porous ones and put plastic aprons over them.
But rather than make more, what if we could make do with what we have?
This time around, however, he will have to make do with a week of downtime.
When you have a camera but no money, you make do with what you can.
Until everyone wises up, then, we'll just have to make do with snail-less emoji bands.
Likely not, because we'd wager that you probably still make do with two-decade-old foam.
Carriers with mixed fleets can at least make do with a motley collection of older airplanes.
Now she says she'll mend the holes and they'll all make do with what they have.
But everyone else just has to make do with the money that they get from sponsors.
US buyers will have to make do with just the one, above the left front wheel.
Now he was cast as the neighborhood bully and had to make do with the role.
In the end, he had to make do with about 22016, mostly guest workers from Romania.
Yet VCs sometimes have to make do with less than they bid for in token sales.
"We were taught to make do with what we had and raise our children," she said.
Seravy has had to make do with an "a disassembler, an assembler, [and] a hex editor.".
The ideologues of the right are left to make do with their jester and his antics.
The plates provide total contact, so you can make do with fewer passes through your hair.
Educators hope Ms. DeVos saw during her visit that they make do with what they have.
She had to make do with an average, run-of-the-mill press release on Twitter. Cool.
Until that day comes, we'll just have to make do with prototypes like this one from FlexEnable.
But if I go there, and they're out, can I make do with chocolate or even vanilla?
You just gotta make do with what you have, and have a really good time doing it.
You could also make do with a Target velvet pumpkin (they come in black, purple, and maroon).
Japan, however, lost a place and will have to make do with sending two skaters to Pyeongchang.
Cats have a confident independence, and their instincts allow them to make do with what they have.
Perhaps you can make do with an Attack on Titan video game and movie in the meantime.
During our trip, my husband and I barely managed to make do with three heavy checked bags.
The government will have to make do with less, so it is not the only one benefitting.
For now, Apple Watch fans will have to make do with the fitness features they already have.
Nobody wants to be out of work and we all have to make do with what have.
Nine times out of 10 I pass on the purchase or make do with something less expensive.
"You make do with what you have," said Koos, a sinewy retired workshop manager with a military mustache.
Our sweet, market-destroying angel will simply have to make do with his $97.5 billion, for now.[Bloomberg]
So, for now, we'll just have to make do with glimpses of Tesla prototypes driving down the street.
Working families will soon have to make do with much less generous handouts unless the government changes course.
Stationary single-dish radio telescopes must make do with the swath of the universe that passes directly overhead.
If people cannot act globally in a global emergency they will have to make do with acting locally.
Instead of playing with toys, Fuller had to make do with what they had lying around the house.
Until then, we'll have to make do with our old faithful Nutella, which is a pretty satisfying alternative.
Those seeking an electrified Range Rover have to make do with the four-door plug-in hybrid model.
If you're not in Japan, though, you'll just have to make do with a real dog for now. 
It appears Apple will have to make do with the same usual incentives that other international brands get.
" Francis said that people "often make do" with having "health, a little money and a bit of entertainment.
With the run on grocery store supplies, Giada says we've gotta learn to make do with fewer options.
Trump might have entered this race wanting our votes, but for now, he'll make do with our shock.
When that rocket exploded, the team scrambled to make do with the supplies already on the International Space Station.
They may query why the Pentagon cannot make do with air- and sea-launched systems already in the pipeline.
As it is, they'll have to make do with Ansi Agolli, Burim Kukelli, and Istanbul Başakşehir forward Sokol Cikalleshi.
At first he had to make do with a mattress on the floor, but soon we found a bed.
I guess the eunuch support group I proposed last week will have to make do with one less member.
Dress shirting, though, was never one of those things I could just make do with what I could find.
There are different sizes, but you can make do with any size as long as it fits your oven.
You can find a couple skills, maybe one or two colors, and then make do with what you can.
The Jewish state has thrived in part because, dayenu, it has always been prepared to make do with less.
And there is a no-pet policy, but they make do with a stuffed octopus and animal-themed art.
"I had to get help and make do with what I could," Tomlinson said of life during her pregnancy.
After the bureaucracy takes the first and largest chunk of healthcare dollars, providers must make do with the leftovers.
You can shop a little on the way home, or make do with what's in the fridge and pantry.
If meaningful civic friendship is impossible, we can make do with mere civility — sharing drinks and watching the game.
Very forward thinking Doherty household, no sign of Joseph so we'll have to make do with 2 Mary's #lesbiannativity pic.twitter.
A notice stuck to the door explained that, once again, the world would have to make do with a quartet.
Like the welfare law, Graham-Cassidy would force states to make do with substantially less (or maybe even zero) money.
Now Eustolia, 66, is sleeping on the floor of a nearby church while her family members make do with tents.
But if you have limited resources, you have to make do with what you've got — so a staycation it is.
But until then, we'll have to make do with the third-party gadgets to talk to Alexa in our cars.
We usually go out for dinner on Fridays but decide to make do with what we have in the fridge.
Which means that 6th-gen Apple Watch could have far superior battery life than what we make do with currently.
If you aren't in the UK, make do with just about any canned G&T like these from Greenhook Ginsmiths.
With friends like Gopnik, liberals who don't want to live in the past might have to make do with Sullivan.
I make do with the blender and we have a chopped apple concoction with almond butter, toasted nuts, and strawberries.
For now, as people look for things to watch and entertaining distractions, we have to make do with what's available.
The town's seven thousand farmers have to make do with roughly one fuel delivery of about 2000,215 gallons per week.
As users opt out of tracking en masse, advertisers are going to have to make do with limited location data.
But about 150m retirees had to make do with a state pension scheme open to both urban and rural residents.
We will just have to make do with these glaringly apparent, undeniable examples of racist behavior, like people wearing blackface.
Gallaher said at the end of the day, scientists will make do with the resources that they have at their disposal.
The airmen at CSpOC currently have to make do with something more like a series of snapshots than a live feed.
Until that gets squared away, the city's eco-conscious commuters will have to make do with bikes rather than electric scooters.
You just learn to make do with everything you're given, mastering the quirks and compromises of a not-quite-modern war.
That means customers in New York, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. will have to make do with pedal bikes for now.
In the meantime, make do with the addition of s'mores flavored coffee and doughnuts and the chain's new frozen coffee drinks.
Consequently, regulatory agencies make do with the ill-fitting powers they have, often stretching them in unanticipated ways to meet challenges.
But for now, the school's 1,100 students make do with crumbling walls, peeling paint and classrooms that on Friday were sweltering.
But UBS is not looking to add adviser head count, Mathews said, and could make do with several hundred fewer advisers.
When the holiday falls on a weekday, constructors have to make do with what they can pack into a 15x15 grid.
So Team Israel would have to make do with what it had and take on teams that clearly seemed more talented.
Rather than appearing willful, the composition seems to suggest that Petersen had made a pledge to make do with what he had.
Researchers excavating specimens out of the permafrost, or frozen ground, in the Arctic make do with much more down to Earth tools.
If we're going to have to make do with only one USB-C port, at least make the fastest one available. WTF?
Because the chefs have to make do with the ingredients from another person's fridge, the amount of available food varies between episodes.
You can always make do with a tiny kitchen, after all, but not a "bedroom" if it doesn't actually fit a bed.
If you opt for #vanlife or a towable tiny home, for example, you'll need to make do with around 200 square feet.
We're also not a super paid band or anything, so we make do with what we have—but it works for us.
So for many years I had to make do with brief, stilted conversations and photos that my husband would send by email.
" Comment from yet another industry insider carried on very strangely the engineers' string of axioms: "You make do with what you have.
Staten Island, alas, will have to make do with a free indoor concert at the St. George Theater (June 63, 26 p.m.).
I thought guiltily of my colleagues at the press center, having to make do with omelettes and no hooks for their hats.
She envisions a world in which we force ourselves to make do with less, not one where we sustain expectations of more.
But until the Kanye 53 revolution, we'll have to make do with a definitive ranking of Bernie and Hillary's celebrity delegates (cele-gates).
In the meantime, iOS users can make do with Night Shift, Apple's feature for changing the color temperature of your display at night.
Photo: Sam Rutherford (Gizmodo)Meanwhile the XPS 153 2-in-1 has to make do with a microSD and three USB-C ports.
I've been able to make do with previous iPhone cameras just fine, but low-light photography has always left something to be desired.
By contrast, people in the northern states and in Berlin, Hamburg and Bremen will have to make do with the nationally mandated nine.
Or I guess we can just make do with the LEGO set that clearly understands who the real star of the movie was.
Second place gets the same invite to the ceremony and $3,000, while runners up will make do with $500 and staying at home.
You'll just have to make do with USB-C headphones, wireless headphones or use a dongle to connect standard headphones with 3.5mm jacks.
Down here, on paper, is what we have to make do with, "the novel as it now exists," footnotes to that original novel.
Accordingly, both candidates will have to make do with either their existing authority or by accepting opposition suggestions to get what they want.
Since Uchimura's arrival on the world stage, Japan have had to make do with silver medals behind champions China in 2008 and 2012.
But sometimes, you just don't want to deal with going to the gym, so you have to make do with your bodyweight alone.
Unwilling to enter in a direct quid pro quo with their users, the data titans must make do with whatever their users submit.
The chefs had to make do with impromptu kitchens, set up on folding tables inside the glassy public atrium at 180 Maiden Lane.
We may have to make do with cosmetic changes — the end of replays, for example, and changing when the tournament is played — first.
These last ingredients are available in Middle Eastern groceries and online, but you could make do with lemon juice, sweet vinegar and honey.
Though the economy continues to add jobs, it appears that many workers are willing to make do with a lower salary in the meantime.
There's something alluring about not being able to build a castle or a fort and simply having to make do with what is available.
Unsurprisingly, my little Sainsbury's didn't have many of these ingredients, so I make do with what I can find in the cupboard and fridge.
Oh, and because it's 3,200 metres above sea level, inhabitants have to make do with about a third less oxygen than at sea level.
I had no access to the boys-only friend groups actually playing co-op games, so I had to make do with solitary gaming.
Small red knots with short bills could not reach the clams, so they had to make do with the less nutritious sea grass roots.
He must make do with a fortune in the tens of millions rather than billions of dollars, and an upstate manse overlooking the Hudson.
He traces cornbread dressing back to kush, a kind of cornbread scramble created by enslaved Africans who had to make do with antebellum rations.
Indian cooks attending the Royal Navy brought the name and notion of curry to the islands, and had to make do with local spices.
The poor make do with any body they can get their hands on, whose age, race and even gender may be different from theirs.
On Earth, ZBLAN producers make do with large facilities that drop beads of molten glass down multiple stories, drawing out the material into strands.
In the United States, 34 G.M. plants went dark, forcing striking workers to make do with a $250-a-week subsidy from the union.
Others make do with an array of lesser choices: bicycles, scooters, bicycle rickshaws, motorized rickshaws, buses so crowded that passengers hang out the door.
On the streets of Thailand, this would be skewered over charcoal; here, Ms. Nitmai must make do with a pan atop an induction burner.
Because your birthday Fell a week before Christmas—December the 18th—you'd have to make do With the merest token of a family present.
Cage said he has "the best of the best" working for him and that has allowed them to make do with limited resources — for now.
Things didn't work out quite so well the second time around, with Mr Obama having to make do with just 56% of endorsements in 2012.
That depends on whether the president, Sergio Mattarella, decides to push parliament to adopt a new system or make do with the current legal mess.
For now, you'll have to make do with putting your latte down to handle the demands of your two-handed keyboard — or just summon Siri.
As with Facebook, this is an Android-only deal, so those of you on iOS will have to make do with the full-fat Skype.
If I don't have everything I've asked for then I make do with what I've got and it ends up being much simpler and better.
Until the movie hits theaters, however, fans will have to make do with Pokémon Go and re-watching Big Little Lies for the third time.
I pull on an oversized sweater and high-waisted jeans, make do with my bedhead, whip up a quick smoothie, and head out the door.
We spend 18 percent of our G.D.P. on health care, while Australia, Canada, Denmark and Japan seem to make do with about half that amount.
For those of you who live in states where ballot selfies are outlawed, you're just gonna have to make do with the "I voted" stickers.
A final distinction for the 300e is that it has a full-size SD card slot, while the other two machines make do with MicroSD.
Females have them, top and bottom, sprouting from the rims of the eyes in black rays; males make do with eyebrows, typically thick and dark.
Until then, they have to make do with showing me a guitarist play the riff from "Sweet Child O' Mine" on a 20-second loop.
Some call for a mixture of plain cornmeal and flour; some call for self-rising cornmeal; some require buttermilk, and some make do with water.
Buses in Athens make do with worn-out tires, often at great risk to public safety, because there is not enough money for spare parts.
So she returned to the apartment in the West 90s that she had liked the most, deciding she could make do with less closet space.
Instead, he will probably just make do with curling up in the comfort of his home in Ohio and watch the drama unfold via television.
The next tier of clubs are having to make do with much less, opening up opportunities for firms like Puma, Under Armour and New Balance.
Obviously some pubs I go to don't have ale—the further out you get, you just have to make do with what you can get really.
If a growing chunk of the workforce has to make do with poor pay and worse pensions, governments will eventually have to pick up the pieces.
With the Galaxy S8 a no-show at this year's MWC, we're expecting to make do with a new Galaxy Tab S33 as Samsung's big news.
It looks like we'll have to make do with lingering shots of donut-eating directors until 2017, then, when the new Twin Peaks arrives on Showtime.
He is 41st in the American standings and, barring a sizzling summer stretch, will have to make do with his already-assigned role as captain's assistant.
They're larger than life, often beautiful beyond the physical blessings most of us make do with, and rewarded with money, fame, opportunity — the stuff of dreams.
Then, as these jokes tend to go, he ended up stuck with the gift, and he had to make do with a painting of naked Bieber.
This year's Oscars ceremony hasn't given us much in the way of Frances McDormand reaction shots, so we'll have to make do with misplaced Teigen shade.
But until that point, we'll have to make do with the reconstruction itself, which turned out to be as delightfully derpy as it is scientifically useful.
Guess you'll just have to make do with Tinder, Bumble, OKCupid, Happn, Grindr, Hinge, and the thousands of other dating apps out there in the meantime. 
Air travelers in India will have to make do with no Wi-Fi connectivity on planes for now as the government continues to have security concerns.
Hosts the Netherlands also had to make do with silver in the women's madison won in superb style by British duo Katie Archibald and Emily Nelson.
Instead, those movies have gone underground, retreating to the straight-to-VOD circuit and forced to make do with meager budgets and decades-old intellectual property.
The other countries with carriers capable of launching jet aircraft—Britain, China, France, India, Italy, Russia and Spain—make do with smaller and less potent vessels.
Jane Austen's House Museum, which now owns the ring, declined to lend it to the Folger, forcing the exhibition to make do with a gold copy.
Soccer players have stadiums and gymnasts have gymnasiums, but us bikers have to make do with the roads—but MAC is working hard to fix that.
Online Courses Are Harming the Students Who Need the Most Help Online education helps school districts that need to save money make do with fewer teachers.
Smartphones and laptops equipped with features that would help make her life easier are too costly, so she has to make do with her flip phone.
As a barefoot child she tended cattle and learned to make do with very little, in marked contrast to her later years of free-spending ostentation.
The coaches at Hoover High, where most students qualify for free or reduced-price meals, would have to make do with watching the old-fashioned way.
Most caddies have had to make do with free clothing, if they're lucky, receiving none of the endorsement deals that go to even low-ranked players.
But their high cost may lead some poorer patients to make do with fewer or older ones, while those with more disposable income might stock extras.
Without the money needed to maintain and update electronic voting machines, officials have to make do with equipment that was manufactured in 2008 or even earlier.
Four years ago, Mikael Kingsbury had to make do with a silver medal in Sochi as compatriot Bilodeau claimed his second consecutive gold in the men's moguls.
That means instead of needing a mobile megaprocessor like Qualcomm's Snapdragon, Kindle can make do with a rather basic (and ultra-low power) chip from Freescale Semiconductor.
For now, American dessert aficionados will have to make do with Oreo's imminent Mississippi Mud pie-flavored release, which should be coming to stores any day now.
Gaza has been forced to make do with the limited power it gets from Egypt and Israel, supplemented by occasional supplies of fuel from Turkey and Qatar.
Opponents say that however well-intentioned they may be, artificial wage increases distort the labour market and give employers an incentive to make do with fewer workers.
Fans will just have to make do with the fact that in the DC Extended Universe, she doled out plenty of sage advice to her Amazon sisters.
There's a reason so many of us make do with whatever the former tenants left behind — the couch has always been a big question mark, until now.
"I will be a governor who doesn't ask families to make do with less, while Lansing does less with more," Schuette said, according to The Detroit News.
At least in the United States, wrestling has few household names, and wrestlers, like athletes in other low-profile Olympic sports, must make do with far less.
Meanwhile, many of the Air Force's E-3 crews may have to make do with the most sophisticated computer technology the 1970s and 80s had to offer.
In the meantime, we will have to make do with what has been handed down from above—and our condolences go out to the people of Japan.
"This year, however, its production curbs will increasingly have to make do with playing second fiddle to a Texas-sized wave of U.S. shale growth," he added.
" Francis said during a homily at Mass in St. Peter's Basilica that people "often make do" with having "health, a little money and a bit of entertainment.
Unable to afford those drugs out-of-pocket, patients might forego treatment or try to make do with medicines that are not the most efficient or effective.
Dutch F1 fans have had to make do with exhibitions and minor motorsport competitions at the Zandvoort Circuit over recent years in order to get their racing fix.
Anarock property consultant chairman Anuj Puri estimates developers today make do with profit margins of around 8-12%, down from 25-30% margins three to four years ago.
Certain things do shift and move; you might not get all the coverage that you want based on the timing, and have to just make do with it.
Until that day, however, the human race will have to make do with this semi-definitive guide to all the bullshit that supporters have to hear every year.
Holly Beale, a program manager at Microsoft who moved to Seattle in 2015 and likes to backcountry ski, has had to make do with these changing conditions too.
Gulfo predicts that if the FDA stops regulating out of fear and cuts some of its overly burdensome processes, the agency can make do with what it has.
Another problem is that the recent economic boom years are over – meaning governments have to make do with less, precisely as their people have come to expect more.
Hamas offices in Istanbul will remain open and Israel will have to make do with Turkey's assurances that they will only be allowed to engage in "political" activities.
I stupidly left all of my makeup at the theater last night, so I have to make do with my second string products to get ready this morning.
"The rich Hui sacrifice cows, and the others make do with sheep, chickens, and ducks," he explained, as we passed by a cow carcass dangling from a hook.
The vision required to develop a product like the Octavia Electrodes can only come from the first-hand experience of having to make do with existing, exclusionary products.
It's just that U.S. customers tend to eschew the mid-market, instead opting to either pay for a premium phone or make do with a sub-$200 model.
Back then, they had to make do with what they could find in English markets and it sometimes took months to get food from the Caribbean to England.
If you're looking to make do with what you have around the house, Isabel Azocar, a stylist out of Ian McCabe Studio in Washington D.C., recommends grooming scissors.
Physicians have described the situation inside hospitals as "apocalyptic," with patients dying while waiting for a bed and doctors struggling to make do with limited numbers of ventilators.
While Porsche is promising cheaper variants of the Taycan next year, well-heeled drivers of the world will have to make do with these two options for now.
It is an incendiary issue in a country where almost two in five are jobless, and many families make do with one earner at home, if at all.
The poor sometimes have bags, but throughout history the very poorest have had to make do with sacks, or simply with a cloth gathered up at the edges.
The World Health Organization said Tuesday it hopes to have a vaccine within 18 months, but until then countries will have to make do with resources available to them.
If you didn't score a ticket to Super Bowl 50, you will have to make do with mustard as the only golden hue on your game day hot dog.
So instead of enjoying 20 to 0003 seconds of a static image with no sound, you'll have to make do with a simple photo, like the meme gods intended.
But quality kitchen accessories are not cheap, so most home cooks make do with the hand-me-down or knockoff items that will inevitably ruin a meal or two.
While a single-camera sitcom can more easily make do with shorter episodes, the multi-cam needs space for scenes to spread out, for the cast to establish chemistry.
On other nights, customers have to make do with a poster-size photograph of a fiddler hanging on the wall, the gilded statue of Johann Strauss II in Vienna.
If you don't have a doctor at your disposal who can whisk your beau away for a love-examination, you'll have to do make do with outwardly physical signs.
"We were taught to make do with what we had and raise our children," a 76-year old woman at the food bank in Bremerhaven, above, told our correspondent.
Alas, this kind Black Mirror-esque instant cloning technology has not been invented (as far as we know), so we'll have to make do with conventional DIY Halloween costumes.
The ethical imperative is obvious: it is wrong that women have to make do with a "one-size-fits-men" world, as Caroline Criado Perez, a writer, puts it.
Whereas my dog, Georgia, used to make do with walks around the block, now she gets to run through the woods, sniff neighbors' lawns, and snooze in our backyard.
You would have to make do with the small screen of an iPhone or iPad, or add an Apple TV to your television to watch on a larger screen.
Time and again, we see how these workers are asked to make do with a lower standard of working life: lower pay, fewer benefits, worse offices, and so on.
Yet again, and against that pessimistic reading, there is merely stoic accommodation in Amichai's words: this is what we have, and we will have to make do with it.
So I decided to put the fantasy future on hold for now and continue to make do with my small closets and the two dressers in the master bedroom.
Despite hopes that Mr. Kim would also visit there, local officials had to make do with a stopover on Wednesday by a North Korean delegation missing its supreme leader.
Teams from North America, Africa, Asia and the Pacific have had to make do with occasional underdog triumphs: Costa Rica, North Korea, Algeria and Senegal have all beaten former champions.
Until the movie's release date, which still hasn't been officially announced, fans will have to make do with scouring the stars' social media feeds for any behind-the-scenes looks.
The key finding, write the scientists, is that no space phenomena are strong enough to dry up the oceans completely, and so the tardigrades can make do with what's left.
It will get more expensive to share user data, and sites will probably try to make do with fewer partners, which would certainly be a win from a privacy perspective.
If we need to contain our messes in the meantime, we'll just have to make do with spreading napkins on our laps and carrying wipes in our regular old pockets.
Conventional pharmaceutical treatment offered by some healthcare services include vaginal estrogen and hormone replacement therapy, but many women don't receive medical treatment or make do with over-the-counter lubricants.
The prevailing idea was that prevention is better than cure—that aid should be focussed on vaccination and education, and that poor people should make do with what they had.
If you can live with black, white, or silver, you can probably make do with the base trim, otherwise prepare to spend $3,580 more on the Preferred for—not much.
Local people, who should be looking forward to the harvest in late March, are instead awaiting its failure and wondering how to make do with meagre supplies of food aid.
But they adapted and learned to make do with less, further perfecting the practice of bombing with razor-sharp tags, quick and crisp outlines, and stylish two-color throw-ups.
There are bright spots on the 249ers, but none of them are at quarterback, where Kelly will make do with Blaine Gabbert and Didn't You Used To Be Colin Kaepernick?
It's the difference between the resources available to an MLB team — coaches, nutritionists, the finest equipment money can buy — and what a Little League squad has to make do with.
In the past, Melbourne commuters have had to make do with the official PTV app, widely complained about on its release in 2012, after it replaced the old MetLink app.
But viewers had to make do with the self-portrait, because the artist with bright blue eyes and a wry, self-deprecating sense of humor was nowhere to be seen.
Without power, Mr. Davis said, he and his wife, Sandra, 70, would have to make do with flashlights, and they would lose the beef, turkey, ribs and roast in their freezer.
While different iterations of the new limo have been spotted in road tests since last year, Trump has had to make do with the same Cadillac that served President Barack Obama.
This meant that I didn't have proper access to period products and had to make do with pads that I pilfered from my mum's bathroom in the hope she wouldn't notice.
Minsk must make do with a fraction of Baku's budget, a reported Games budget of under $60 million for the event that will have no swimming competition or traditional athletics events.
One can make do with minor ailments with over-the-counter drugs but our main concern was serious illnesses that could need hospitalization or surgery and ObamaCare took care of that.
Greene does not pine for the era — her era — when women were always expected to put dinner on the table, fetch coffee for their husbands and make do with domestic life.
That's why there's a system for everything, and Thomas will have to make do with the kind of cookware most people use at home—there is no room for industrial machinery.
Virtual reality — such a tease… In the meanwhile, Rift early adopters will have to make do with the Xbox One controller that the headset ships with (and the two bundled games).
In this tropical country, they kept Friendly and six other Siberian huskies in an enclosure with 24-hour air-conditioning, even if they themselves would sometimes make do with a fan.
Rather than add to his mounting debt, he decided to forgo a meal plan — thousands of dollars for the year — and instead make do with canned goods and freebies around campus.
" The lower-end Reno 2 phones, the Reno 2 Z and Reno 26.1 F, have to make do with a "regular" vertically lifting pop-up selfie camera and an "atmosphere light.
Otherwise, your contribution level may not keep pace with your real-life living standard, and that could become problematic at retirement, when you may be forced to make do with less.
Well, judging by how she had seen them living in New York—God, what a mess that place had been—she decided that they could make do with just about anything.
AG: We never tell countries that they should have a particular number, in terms of a tax number, you know, if countries can make do with whatever average tax they have.
To those of us who make do with fewer zeros and commas, that gap may seem meaningless, but you can fit the annual gross domestic product of North Korea in it.
With dirt floors, a concrete ceiling, and fire pits, the Jungle is an overnight stop for some and a home of sorts for those who can make do with salvaged furniture.
This would mean benefits stay consistent for current and future retirees, but it also means current workers would have to make do with less, which could impact their already poor savings habits.
As the class laughed at the turkeys' apparent stupidity, the professor reminded us that at least the turkeys needed a three dimensional model — humans can make do with a two dimensional representation.
The research is another way for Francophones to help preserve and enrich their language, and more importantly, it frees them from having to make do with unoptimized adaptations of English-based hardware.
One whiff of Boss Orange and I'm instantly back in my fun university days (as a poor student, I had to make do with just a couple of bottles in my collection).
Messi, meanwhile, had to make do with Cristian Pavon and Enzo Perez, who play in Argentina's bruising top flight, and a haggard Javier Mascherano who is seeing out his career in China.
I guess I'll just have to make do with the duck face —  and try my best not to roll my eyes at it, since Chloe's not allowed to make that expression either.
Whether you are running to train or sightsee, make adjustments in pace and expectations, especially if the environment is very different from what you're used to, and make do with what's available.
With the annual open enrollment weeks away, the federal spending cuts have begun to bite, and navigators around the country are racing to revise their plans to make do with less money.
Instead, as they wait to use the room that was most important to them, they make do with a slow cooker and a hot plate, and they're experimenting with one-pot recipes.
Then there was the fact that I couldn't track down Aniston's specific Aveeno moisturizer anywhere in the UK so I decided I'd make do with my usual Nivea SPF 15 day cream.
And so people covering ground for business are often forced to make do with cars, and with whatever they can manage behind the wheel—which usually means making a lot of phone calls.
Remember that the iPhone 11 and the Pixel 3, both of which are considered to be right at the peak of phone camera quality, manage to make do with smaller 12-megapixel sensors.
These days he would make do with the absorption of just Area C, handing areas A and B to Jordan (a deal that would not be accepted by either Jordan or the Palestinians).
There are no major highways leading to the now nearly destroyed town of Amatrice; many nearby areas make do with narrow, dusty country roads where a single fallen tree can cut off access.
"People who produce the best work are still able to make do with what we have," said Liu Zhaohui, co-founder of Beijing Qishouyouyu Culture Media, which backed 100 online films in 2016.
In movies like The Father of My Children and Eden, the 35-year-old writer-director has shown an interest in how people make do with the bad hand life has dealt them.
Google also highlighted music streaming service Awa as an example of local app support, though users of dominant Japanese chat app Line may have to make do with Chinese rival WeChat for now.
And though Mr. Ryle said he hoped to be able to hire back some of the contractors he had let go, for now, he said, he would have to make do with less.
There is a lot of indirect evidence for this hypothetical world, but until we get a direct visual, we will have to make do with concept drawings like this one by Robert Hurt.
Or does he decide to try to make do with what he has, keeping current customers pleased and focusing on optimizing revenue and trimming costs in pursuit of a decent near-term profit?
But that's all just as well, because it looks like we're all going to have to make do with a lot less of it by the year 2050—at least the good stuff.
Some economists recoil at the prospect of the government's spending on students who can afford college instead of only on poor or working-class kids trying to make do with need-based grants.
Instead, the focus here is on the military experience that prepared Eisenhower for leadership: the ability to make do with limited means, to delegate authority, to cooperate with allies and keep up morale.
Artists and designers have just had to learn to make do with the limitations of the available tools when using computers to create 23D content—or find less-than-ideal compromises to their workflow.
For now, fans of Stranger Things will just have to make do with this nostalgic music playlist until Season 2 drops or hope that its producers decide to make Janerka's video game a reality.
Those of us interested in the life of the shy Star Wars billionaire must make do with the tiniest of insights into his thinking about what Disney is doing with his former intellectual property.
AWS already had a number of Canadian clients, but this clients have asked for Canada infrastructure for a while now, and have had to make do with using AWS Regions located in other geographies.
For now, anyone that doesn't live near a Mariano's location will have to make do with ordering jars of the OG Cookies & Cream flavor straight from the Cookie Dough Café website or through Jet.com.
EA Sports games like Madden NFL and FIFA are also in the vault, though the most recent versions haven't yet been added to the service — you'll have to make do with the 2015 editions.
That was upped to a full minute in March this year, but Android users were still left out, having to make do with updates like the ability to send stickers in Google Voice conversations.
Having to pay for more than one streaming service is of course par for the course in video—long gone are the days where it makes any sense to make do with just Netflix.
Maybe this is why he's so militantly in favor of the Young British Heritage Society's bizarre version of free speech: In their model, you don't have to make do with the audience you're given.
Arriving in Paris on a Saturday evening after most stores had closed, he had to make do with a couple of shirts from Zara and a coat borrowed from the Greek ambassador to France.
Middle Tennessee (25-123), Old Dominion (25-7) Western Kentucky (27-11) and three other 20-win teams all had to make do with the N.I.T., or in some cases no tournament at all.
Some days ordering a venti-sized coffee from Starbucks is necessary — but if you're looking to order a venti Nitro Cold Brew, you'll have to make do with just a tall or a grande.
"This collection has so many incidental pleasures that I nearly always felt lucky to be reading it while the rest of the world had to make do with Twitter," our critic Dwight Garner writes.
The degree to which you feel this problem definitely depends on your income, or at least, being in the privileged position of not having to make do with the only thing you can afford.
And if that's not big enough, LG also showed off a gigantic 173-inch micro LED TV at IFA, though sadly, that set will have to make do with a max resolution of just 4K.
Sure, I could invest in something portable that was actually made for gaming, like a Nintendo Switch, but it felt more luxurious to make do with the phone I was always carrying with me anyway.
SHE'S BEEN KNOWN TO IMPROVISE It's comforting to know that even supermodels have left the house without something of vital importance and had to make do with whatever's left in their car on occasion. 9.
She told them that Taco Bell should at least have offered to give her the meal at half price, if they wanted her to make do with fire sauce—or (gasp) no sauce at all.
But if you want the bright, beautiful Dolby Vision-capable HDR screen, you have to forgo the touch feature and the Windows Hello-compatible camera and make do with the not-very-good fingerprint scanner.
Millions of years hence, when it has receded farther still, it will never come close enough to create a total eclipse, and any inhabitants Earth then has will have to make do with annular ones.
The Bundesbank, which surveyed thousands of households in 2014 as part of its study, found that the bottom half of the population had to make do with just 2.5 percent of the country's overall wealth.
Their reluctance may have stemmed in part from the fact that Obama had made it clear that, while he preferred to fight ISIS under a new AUMF, he would make do with the old one.
Until then, Republicans will have to make do with using other studies, like one from the Mercatus Center at George Mason University that found the bill would cost the government $220006 trillion over 2202 years.
The monthly income averages around 2.45 million rupiah (US$181), but one in ten residents make do with just 250,000 rupiah a month (<$20), much less than the World Bank's $0003/day threshold for poverty.
The closing of Hoboken Terminal, which serves six New Jersey Transit rail lines, forced commuters to make do with contingency plans provided by New Jersey Transit, the third-busiest commuter rail system in the country.
Like many people with homes near Aleppo's old frontlines, the city areas that suffered most damage in a war now into its ninth year, he must now make do with a life in the rubble.
As long as Spotify or Apple Music or Tidal have most of what you want, you'll probably see people make do with whatever is available and augment their downloaded libraries with purchased or pirated music.
We couldn't find him actual Wonder Bread in our immediate vicinity in Williamsburg, so he'll make do with the closest thing we can get to it, which is another highly processed sliced white sandwich bread.
In the meantime, we'll have to make do with this recording of DJ Qu and DJ October's incredible back to back set, sent our way by James Browning and the rest of the Balamii crew.
Venus has had to make do with a very respectable seven, although she twice came close to an eighth during her resurgent 20013 season, when she reached the finals of the Australian Open and Wimbledon.
While professional and collegiate athletes have access to trainers and doctors, players on high school teams and in youth leagues often make do with a volunteer physician or an emergency medical technician, if at all.
If you've spent your life buying name brands, shopping retail, always having reasonably fashionable clothing and being able to afford the newest things, the idea of having to make do with less can be daunting.
Until the creative team sees fit to tease more tantalizing reveals, we'll just have to make do with rampant speculation — which is, at least, a pastime in which Star Wars fans have been indulging for decades.
There's a reason President Obama had to make do with a heavily modified BlackBerry for most of his time in office, and why security officials reportedly issued Trump a locked-down device when he took office.
PACIFIC PALISADES, California (Reuters) - Boosted by a victory in his last PGA Tour start, Hideki Matsuyama will have to make do with limited preparation for this week's Northern Trust Open after struggling with flu-like symptoms.
Sadly, the chance of tapping Stone for advice of any kind seems miniscule, so until we manage to breach her inner circle of friends, we'll have to make do with stalking her red carpet beauty looks.
If they in fact want to do more than that, the users are currently forced to make do with the sparsely furnished restitution room, currently populated by a few house plants and two bean bag chairs.
If you're exhausted enough from driving or hiking, paddling or just lying out in the sun, you could make do with canned beans and gas-station white bread, and the experience would be just as grand.
Learning to make do with what Mars has to offer is one of the biggest challenges of visiting our nearest neighbor, but the results of the European Space Agency's latest 3D-printing experiments prove it isn't impossible.
Most "first-class" passengers on these routes now sit in seats with the same legroom as economy passengers, albeit with an empty middle seat, and make do with extras such as lounge access, and food and drink.
Weaving in and out of traffic, only the lucky few ride Harley Davidsons - a rare and expensive brand in Iraq - while others make do with bikes pimped-up to look something like the "Easy Rider" dream machines.
The joy on the faces of the children, staff and teachers represent the hopes and dreams of an island trying its best to make do with what it has, but that is deserving of much, much more.
As for negatives, we found that you can only fit a full gallon of milk in the fridge if you remove one of the interior glass shelves entirely and make do with two shelves instead of three.
Producers and directors whose story lines call for gritty hovels, classic capes, bungalows, grand beachfront properties and every sort of residence in between have an incentive to make do with the housing stock in the five boroughs.
Not that it seemed to bother her much, but her drive to make do with what she had is one of the reasons people love her today – and probably one of the reasons she became such a success.
However, the continuing shortage of the more advanced N2500 respirator masks, which health care professionals need to care for infected people, means people will have to make do with disposable paper surgical masks or makeshift coverings like scarves.
However, the standard Note 10 has to make do with some spec reductions including a lower-res full HD+ 2,280 by 1,080 screen, no microSD card slot, no DepthVision camera, and just 8GB of RAM instead of 12GB.
After that, I tried to make do with the fact that Edna St. Vincent Millay's middle name is not an old family name, as people tend to assume; she was named for St. Vincent's Hospital, in Greenwich Village.
The interesting thought is that there are tons of things that you carry around or encounter every day that can comfortably be weaponized almost as effectively as the stuff that we suspect Okinawan peasants had to make do with.
Soldier Tej Bahadur Yadav, part of the Border Security Force (BSF) along the Line of Control with Pakistan in the state of Jammu & Kashmir, has alleged that troops are ill-treated and have to make do with food shortage.
The share of the world's populace living in countries with a free press fell from 38% in 2005 to 31% in 19943; the share who had to make do with only "partly free" media rose from 28% to 36%.
Uber drivers are flexible and independent in the sense that, more so than most workers in our economy, they are expected to make do with fewer wages, less social benefits, and less control over their own labor and livelihood.
For shorter routes, though, it seems as if you'll still have to pony up for food on the flight, make do with pretzels, or otherwise suffer the indignity of unwrapping whatever weirdly pungent food you purchased in the terminal.
The two larger devices have the aforementioned 1.9GHz processor and 32GB internal storage, as well as 3GB of RAM, while the littlest child, the A3, has to make do with 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, and a 1.6GHz processor.
While many of his contemporaries produced some of their finest work in the 1970s and after, fans of the "voodoo child" had to make do with a series of posthumous releases, cobbled together from a slew of unfinished projects and outtakes.
Following the exits of Lleyton Hewitt and Nick Kyrgios, Australia will have to make do with having only one man in the last 16 as compatriots Bernard Tomic and John Millman face off in the night match on Rod Laver Arena.
While demand for other white-collar jobs has grown substantially since the start of the recession, law firms and corporations are finding they can make do with far fewer in-house lawyers than before, squeezing those just starting their careers.
I would normally just make do with the maternity pants but being Fall has officially arrived here in Minnesota and I'm gearing up to do some traveling to Washington, DC and Colorado this month, I wanted some pants that actually fit.
Those who bought the personal meet-and-greets will have to make do with a "VIP Hangout," where they may have the chance to meet the singer and take pictures of him, not with him, due to increased security measures.
Those who wanted to hear from the Trump administration had to make do with a video appearance by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who spoke from the balcony of the State Department, with the Lincoln Memorial over his left shoulder.
Not willing to, you know, go to the store or anything, I decided I'd make do with what I had, which at the time was an unopened package of mushrooms, a few allium bulbs and the contents of my pantry.
As difficult as it is to trace the origin stories of the use of bitter ingredients, it seems safe to assume that it was often the result of necessity: In times of scarcity, you learn to make do with anything edible.
The more interesting and maybe predictive group are the Republicans who, to varying degrees, tried to make do with Trump, found ways to rationalize him and still won't acknowledge how offensive he is but have fled or are fleeing government nonetheless.
Many aspects of the House tax blueprint, the most specific plan floating around the capital, are already creating consternation across a swath of sectors that have learned over the years how to make do with the status quo, however cumbersome.
Monster Hunter World did a great job of easing new players into the series, but it was arguably too easy for experienced players, who had to make do with stat-boosted "tempered" versions of monsters and the occasional difficult downloadable quest.
Then at I/O in May this year, Nest got rebranded as Google Nest—accounts would be moved over, products would get renamed, the Nest website would disappear, and Nest users would have to make do with Google's overarching privacy policy.
"The Sikh detainees have not been allowed to wear turbans and instead have either been uncovered or forced to make do with towels, t-shirts, hats, or other inadequate coverings," wrote William Teesdale, chief investigator for the public defender's office, in the lawsuit.
But right now, I really don't have the funds to go crazy on all different creams and moisturizers, so I just make do with washing my face, getting all of my makeup off, and occasionally putting on a cheap mask if I can.
Tea leaves are now shredded into tiny bits, which generate lots of flavour but less of the subtlety for which Indian tea has been prized abroad (Indians boil rather than brew their tea and so tend to make do with lower-quality leaves).
I'd have liked to see Sony match B&W in having a USB-C charging port, but the M2s have to make do with the old MicroUSB connection — fine for most, but terrible for my "USB-C all the things" personal philosophy.
"While demand for other white-collar jobs has grown substantially since the start of the recession, law firms and corporations are finding they can make do with far fewer in-house lawyers than before, squeezing those just starting their careers," Schieber explained.
Resigning from what he contemptuously describes as "a good job" in advertising ("the dirtiest ramp that capitalism has yet produced"), Comstock finds a job in a book shop and is forced to make do with two pounds a week—about £130 today.
But playing in an era when Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal have snared 43 slams between them, Murray has had to make do with winning just two titles — at the U.S. Open in 2012 and the All England Club in 2013.
In an age characterized by ideological "sorting," Silicon Valley's fundamental cosmopolitanism puts it all but fatally at odds with the Trumpist Republican Party; that leaves the stray liberal­tarians of the tech industry to make do with a home within the Democratic coalition.
But the star and the black director, Michael B. Jordan and Ryan Coogler, will have to make do with fans' appreciation and more than $100m at the box office: the film's only nomination went to Mr Stallone, this time for Best Supporting Actor.
At the time, people following the launch on live stream had to make do with limited footage of the touchdown, but SpaceX has now given us a better look at its latest success, one it calls its "hottest and fastest" landing yet.
Combatant commanders should still have a Senior Foreign Service Officer as a POLAD, ideally one between ambassadorial appointments, but many lower level commanders would not only be able to make do with an Embassy officer, they would do better in such an arrangement.
The push for sector-specific minimum wages comes amid a broader debate about inequality, and a sense that the fruits of the decade-long recovery have largely gone to highly educated Americans while most workers have had to make do with modest gains.
Until she summoned a lightsaber in The Force Awakens, leading women in the Star Wars movies had never wielded the saga's signature weapon; Padmé and Leia, in the few instances they were allowed to fight, had to make do with puny blasters.
Athens staged an ATP event between 1986 and 1994 and a WTA competition between 1986 and 1990 but over the past two decades, Greeks have had do make do with watching tennis on television or traveling abroad to see their top players.
While an episode of an older, more traditional multi-cam like CBS's "All in the Family" might make do with six to 10 scenes, two storylines and fewer sets, "Friends" would have at least three storylines and up to twice as many scenes.
Newcomers can make do with the printed menu's Hunan-style fish fillets and soft tofu, which have none of the muddiness you find at many Sichuan and Hunan restaurants in New York, and leave a slow, tangy burn that rewards spoonful after spoonful.
More than 30 percussion instruments, including maracas and police whistle, help create and clarify the effects; though many productions make do with one player, Bernstein calls for four or five in his symphonic arrangement of the score's dances and they are not underworked.
The lack of snow has forced the resort to temporarily close down its ski runs in mid-season, local restaurateurs and hoteliers are counting the cost of fewer visitors, and those people that do come make do with other pursuits, like hiking.
They claimed gender discrimination, saying that they receive less compensation and have to make do with inferior training, travel and playing conditions compared with the men's team; a subsequent audit found that from 2016 to 2018, the women's games generated more revenue.
Instead of their gilded mansion, the Roses must now make do with two rooms in a roadside motel and start their lives over in unfamiliar territory, far away from the swanky parties they used to throw with a variety of celebrities in attendance.
Others have had to make do with conversions: 37 Great Jones, which was a television company warehouse, is now a five-unit rental, while 41 Great Jones, once home to hat manufacturers, is on its way to becoming a three-unit condo.
News Analysis To construct an "America First" budget, the initial trade-off for President Trump was fairly obvious: The military and veterans would get more of what they want or need, while diplomats and foreign countries would have to make do with less.
In an ideal world this would mean a five-a-side game with the Hessle Audio lads followed by an egg sarnie and a cup of tea round my house, but until that dream comes true, I'll have to make do with something else.
While the 855 Plus doesn't seem to include any game-changing upgrades, refreshing its flagship processor should add extra appeal to high-end Android phones released in the latter half of the year that otherwise would have had to make do with previously released components.
"It is my firm belief that because Black women have had to make do with far less for centuries, equipping them with early stage capital that is on par with their white male counterparts has the potential to lead to outsized returns," she wrote.
In real life, needless to say, she and Ken had had to make do with less, but she'd held out for a brick cottage in Coventry which had an air of harboring long-ago secrets, though it was rather swamped by the city's postwar redevelopment.
One engineer I spoke to told me that transporting sand and stone for ordinary construction becomes uneconomical after about sixty miles, and that builders usually make do with whatever is available within that radius, even if it means settling for materials that aren't ideal.
For instance, after raising reader anxiety and emotional engagement to a fever pitch at the end of the book's second section, there is no further mention of the thug chasing Nomi — we must make do with the bland information that she boarded the train.
Their unease had only grown as Mulvaney ordered a hiring freeze, put new enforcement cases on hold and sent the Federal Reserve, which funds the C.F.P.B., a budget request for zero dollars, saying the bureau could make do with the money it had on hand.
In the end, Qatar had to make do with a small and curious collection of followers that included Janko Yang, a 23-year-old Chinese student who grew fond of Qatar's soccer team after its under-23 squad visited his hometown, Changzhou, last year.
Article continues after the video below I'm all for franchise crossovers—without them, we'd have no Smash Brothers, Mario Kart would be a much lonelier place, and those Nintendo-produced Olympic Games titles would have to make do with a gaggle of generic human avatars.
Instead, I'm the aunt with stumpy lashes looking on with envy as I make do with my daily regimen of one gold Shu Uemura lash curler (three pumps), followed by generous coats of whatever volumizing mascara I've been told will give me the luscious lashes I crave.
When I saw A Quiet Place, I picked my usual movie theater snacks of popcorn and an Icee (red and blue swirled together if possible, but will make do with just red) and settled in to watch John Krasinski and Emily Blunt say maybe eight words total.
One widely held theory is that environmental changes that led to more open habitats drove a wedge between these animals, leading the ancestors of monkeys to make do with a less nutritious diet of leaves and those of modern apes to thrive upon fruits and seeds.
The A50's bezels are slimmer, its chin is smaller, and despite being practically the same size, Samsung crammed a 6.4-inch 2340 x 1080 OLED screen onto the Galaxy A50, while the Moto G4003 has to make do with a 6.2-inch 2270 x 1080 LCD.
Ford was at least able to make light of the accident a few months after his injuries healed, comparing the advanced technology on the Force Awakens set with the basic props he had to make do with in the original trilogy on ITV's Jonathan Ross Show.
I remember the Humulin box with "human insulin (recombinant DNA origin)" proudly displayed on the label: Biological engineers had transferred human DNA-encoding insulin into bacteria, and that meant my dad could get the real thing and no longer had to make do with insulin from animals.
For Estuardo Orriols, who runs a 10-person graphic design shop in Guatemala City that hit half a million dollars in revenue last year, hiring in developed markets is more profitable than trying to make do with local professionals who lack the deep experience he needs.
Until we can shrink our items to miniature sizes for easier transport, we have to make do with luggage to store all our essentials as we go from point A to point B. Luckily, suitcases are now better than ever, allowing us to transport our belongings with absolute ease.
The normal camera does have an f/1.8 lens and optical image stabilization while the wide-angle has to make do with a slower, unstabilized f/73 lens, but those issues tend to be less important at wider focal lengths because you have more leeway with longer shutter speeds.
While most of us make do with free security applications, or built-in OS tools, paying for extra protection is often worth it, and a dedicated firewall can help your router in the job of keeping unwanted traffic off your network, especially for all your smart home gadgets.
Her use of non-traditional, inexpensive materials evokes the way in which Black people, who generated America's wealth first as enslaved people and then as victims of systemic exploitation, were shut out of the country's largesse and had to make do with whatever materials were ready to hand.
Had it not been for a slipped foot in the beam final, that tally would been five golds, but instead she had to make do with bronze as Sanne Wevers claimed the most unexpected of victories to become the first female Dutch gymnast to grab an individual gold.
While rivals will pit their strength at the world indoor games in the United States in March, Russian athletes have had to make do with a winter season supplemented with five additional Grand Prix events across a country where sporting success is seen as integral to national pride.
Mr. Bottura scurried about, fussing over dishes, barking orders and trying to figure out how to make do with the ingredients at hand: slightly bruised tomatoes, day-old bread and an assortment of other produce, fresh but visually imperfect, that Olympic caterers had deemed unsuitable for their customers.
That at least begins to help explain why he would dare meet up with actor Sean Penn for a jungle chat (the Rolling Stone story was published to much controversy on Saturday.) For now, Chapo will have to make do with this brief (albeit plenty violent) documentary treatment.
It's symptomatic of the illogical workarounds that the scene in which Percy's supernatural powers are first manifested at Camp Half-Blood — a scene that, in the book, involves an exploding toilet — must make do with toilet paper instead, as if he weren't the son of Poseidon but Charmin.
" Mr. Segal, who served jail time as a member of the Jewish Underground that maimed and killed Palestinians in the 1980s, wrote this summer, "The wise thing now is to make do with what it is possible to do, and not lose it all by insisting on impossible goals.
For one, it didn't feature video of the encounter, leaving the jury to make do with the optics of the situation: an officer nervously firing off his gun in a dark, decrepit staircase of a housing project and fatally hitting Gurley, who was coming downstairs with his girlfriend.
While punters on the outside courts had to make do with watching an army of groundstaff dragging the green covers on and off with comical frequency, Del Potro's flowing racket skills lifted the spirits of the soggy fans sitting atop Wimbledon's Henman Hill and following proceedings on the giant TV screen.
Though it seems like a true renegade skater boi or girl would just make do with their stash of cheap wooden takeout chopsticks and soy sauce packets like the rest of us, Vice's Munchies column reports that a fancier (or more commercial, at least) option will soon be swaying sushi fans.
Thus, a smart-phone user would get a virtual network optimised for a high data rate; an autonomous car would connect to a low-latency virtual network; and a household thermostat, light switch or other "internet-of-things" device would make do with a virtual network having lower overall performance.
But with the Serbian state budget under austerity measures and a public sector hiring freeze, he had to make do with—in UNHCR terms, at least—a small budget: just eight million euros for 2015, five million of it to be spent in the last two months of the year.
The median funding secured prior to (not including) the round in which tech companies in the U.S. and Europe achieved a $1 billion valuation during 2017/18 (Data source: PitchBook) A key reason for this greater efficiency in scaling is because European companies have had to make do with less.
Lionsgate had hoped that "Now You See Me 2" would officially end a box-office cold streak, but the studio instead had to make do with a ho-hum $23 million in opening-weekend ticket sales for its magic-themed sequel, or 22 percent less than initial results for the original film.
There is a valid question over whether the midfield Argentina has brought to Russia is capable of playing the way Sampaoli desires — the intense, high-pressing style that has brought him so much success — but it is at the back that Sampaoli has had to make do with what he has got.
When one or two of the company became ill, as occasionally happened, the group had rapidly to reassign the roles; when almost all of them succumbed at the same moment, as befell them after an imprudent dinner in Mexico City, they had to make do with improvised narration and zanily curtailed scenes.
Photo: APIt's been known for some time that the White House has been considering cutting off funding to the International Space Station by 2025 to free up resources for NASA, an agency President Donald Trump wants to send astronauts back to the moon but has also proposed should make do with a shoestring budget.
And while it is important to live in the here and now to ensure you have water for your daily needs, it is just as essential to work on future-proofing your homes and your city for a time when you will have to make do with less water on a more regular basis.
"To live without your parents, live with the uncertainty of what your future is going to be, and yet to move forward and to be a good person, and make do with what you have, and to try and strive for more and try to make something of your life... to me that's just heroic."
If you were a critic without a prearranged appointment to see the game, you had to make do with fleeting glimpses of the inside of what was something of a Zelda-themed grotto, full of interactive elements and, naturally, many Wii U stations running a demo-style slice of the full game to come.
Instead, we make do with the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA), under which you are allotted 34.93 weeks of leave to take care of a child or sick relative (however, only about 60% of all employees are eligible for it, since it only applies to companies with over 50 people and carries other restrictions).
While AI agents like AlphaGo are created with huge datasets, powerful computer hardware, and the equivalent of decades of training time, the MineRL bots had to make do with just 1,000 hours of recorded gameplay to learn from, a single Nvidia graphics processor to train with, and just four days to get up to speed.
In the absence of hard results, election watchers in Iowa and across the country, who had eagerly been awaiting the start of the Democratic nominating process, had to make do with televised snippets of scenes from caucus sites, many of them playing out in messy fashion on college campuses and in local meeting halls and gymnasiums.
Within days of my visit, I talked to a range of people who, either after their own meals or after failing to get a reservation, had concluded that Baehrel couldn't possibly be serving as many diners as he claimed, or be fully booked through the year 2025, or make do with what he foraged on his patch of land.
This is possible thanks to 3D printing, which allows a user to dictate the exact size, shape and amount of impact damping they provide – previously, users have generally had to make do with off-the-shelf shock absorbing components mass manufacturing using techniques like injection moulding, which means you basically have to choose from a menu of pre-set options.
So while all of us non-Australian gallery-goers who'd like to witness this feat of thespianism are fresh out of luck until the day this show makes its way stateside, we'll all just have to make do with watching this 10-second teaser trailer again and again and continue to wonder over the endless transformative prowess of Cate Blanchett.
Her newly released book, Indian-ish: Recipes and Antics from a Modern American Family, is a paean to her mother, Ritu, who served up roti pizza, saag paneer with feta cheese, and dahi toast with sourdough bread — in part, out of a desire for invention mixed with nostalgia, but also because she had to make do with what was available in this new country.
In the space of a few months, new rave filtered through the mainstream and onto TV series like Skins, conceived more bands than you can count with the name "Trash," "Disco," or "Club" in their name, then slunk off again just as all the MDMA in Britain was seized and the next generation of teenagers had to make do with mephedrone and collecting expensive baseball caps.
We can't remember the last time we had money in our account to take out, and breakfast today was a bowl of sawdust and tears, so we'll have to make do with the announcement of JD Twitch's So Low, a new 28 track mix of industrial, cold wave and early 29s synth experimentation, set to hit shops on the 210th of February via Vinyl Factory.
Here, the chefs, Alejandro Salgado and Emilio Macera, make do with a mix of frozen seafood, cramming as much of it as they can into the bowl: half-shelled mussels lined like shields along the rim; gaping clams strewn with little tentacles of squid and pink whorls of imitation crab; shrimp, strips of octopus and mild whitefish — pangasius, a kind of catfish farmed in Vietnam — lurking below.
" Most of the time it is received well with no backlash, but the one time I tried to correct one of my bosses, I was subjected to an aggressive rant on how she used to be a teacher and she doesn't believe in using "they/them" for one person and if I won't let her use "she/her" for me then I'll have to make do with "he/him.
He had already enjoyed considerable success in auto and horse racing when he turned his attentions to soccer, hoping to merge Racing and another Paris club, Paris F.C., to create a rival for the still relatively young P.S.G. His initial plan was rejected; in the end, he had to make do with buying Paris F.C. and simply renaming it Racing, before the formal merger went through a year later.
But though said differentiator has never heard a Ciocarlia album he didn't like, including 2016's Onward to Mars with the zippy "Crayfish Hora" opener you won't find here, he believes you can make do with two: the guest-studded live 2007 memorial concert Queens & Kings, and this vinyl-and-download-only double album, which cherrypicks a catalog they were accruing long before vinyl fetishism became a thing.
In a furious 22012 editorial for the Toronto Star, Peter Howell alleged that HFPA members routinely steal time from other journalists at press events: At the press junket for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button in December 22013, journalists who had flown to Los Angeles from around the world had to make do with interviews from secondary stars of the film, because stars Pitt, Cate Blanchett and director David Fincher were spending all their time currying HFPA favours.
New Videos Suggest the Nintendo Switch Lite Might Have a Drift Problem TooA teardown of the new Nintendo Switch Lite shared on YouTube revealed the new handheld console's…Read more ReadDesigned to match the colors of the yellow or turquoise Switch Lites (those who bought the gray option will have to make do with a little more color) the 8BitDo Lite controller prioritizes portability over functionality with a thin design, and as a result it includes every single button you'll find on the Lite console, minus the two analog joysticks.

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