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16 Sentences With "make sad"

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

And I can make sad music and you can like it.
I could make sad music, but I don't want this kind of music.
Make sad dolls if you're sad, mad dolls if you're mad... Blow me away, Papi.
If you don't drink enough water, the plant starts to make sad faces at you and eventually dies.
For a brief moment, institutions may make sad faces about tough decisions and the abstract horrors of rape.
In the eyes of the resistance, the not-quite-Trumpers posture and tweet and make sad sounds to reporters, but they don't actually do anything.
It's the stuff that makes pizza legendary, the toppings that make sad desk salads worth it, and the start of a full-on burrata obsession.
For people who like shaggy dog stories, add little bits of the green cactus on the top of the omelette to make sad or funny faces.
Neal Brennan: 3 Mics Through a combination of one-liners, stand-up comedy, and frank discussions about his own depression, Neal Brennan manages to make sad dude seem like less of a caricature and more like an actual, complex individual with whom you'd like to share a plate of nachos and discuss your childhood.
Rajamanthri with his wife Malini (Kusum) went to the function and his five allies make sad and surprise expressions to each other.
"Library list of woes make sad reading," North Shore Times Advertiser, 10 Jun 2003, p. 1. Another factor driving the need for change was the absence of enough space for community groups, such as primary schools and students, bookclubs,"Booktalk group," North Shore Times Advertiser, 20 May 2003. and author events."Handbooks presented to librarian," North Shore Times Advertiser, 14 May 2003.
Thaw Sway started heard about "Mi" from the soldier "Maung Ko Lay" who had come into the army to make sad his lover. He left the army after the war who had been very supportive of his parents and he usually talk about "Mi". Soon, he found "Mi" at a hotel. Since "Mi" was started born, he attended the convent school and went reached to the tenth grade.
The music for the song was written by Seiji Kameda, an infrequent songwriter for the band. Kameda wrote the tracks "Superstar" and "Tōmei Ningen" from Adult, and most notably the digital single "Senkō Shōjo" (2007), which was commercially successful enough to be certified gold by the RIAJ twice. Kameda considered the songs he had written for the band as all "bright", so wanted to attempt to make sad or dark songs. The song was originally called "Breast" in the demo stage.
Worse, many critics who had raved about the rocky Good Feeling rubbished the album for the band's move into more melodic, melancholic material (for example, "Travis will be best when they stop trying to make sad, classic records"—NME). When the album slipped as far as No. 19, it stopped. Word of mouth and increasing radio play of the single "Why Does It Always Rain on Me?" increased awareness of the band and the album began to rise back up the chart. When Travis took the stage to perform this song at the 1999 Glastonbury Festival, after being dry for several hours, it began to rain as soon as the first line was sung.
Initial reviews of The Man Who were mixed, with several publications who had championed the more rock-oriented Good Feeling criticising the album for the band's move towards melodic, melancholic material. Stuart Bailie of NME objected to the band's decision to scale back the "rowdy" aspects of Good Feeling to make a record "over-loaded with ballads", and concluded that despite the presence of some good songs, "Travis will be the best when they stop trying to make sad, classic records." Danny Eccleston of Q wrote that The Man Who loses momentum after its first four songs, with the remainder of the album being "almost tyrannically tasteful" and lacking "the most enchanting aspects of Good Feeling". Selects Steve Lowe, however, felt that even without much musical innovation or a defining statement, the album showcases the band as "ordinary chaps making extraordinarily pretty music" and "good songwriters not trying too hard".
The series follows the adventures of Finn (voiced by Jeremy Shada), a human boy, and his best friend and adoptive brother Jake (voiced by John DiMaggio), a dog with magical powers to change shape and grow and shrink at will. In this episode, Finn and Jake stumble across a horse named James Baxter (voiced by Baxter the animator) who has the ability to make sad people feel better. While seeking to emulate James Baxter's style, Finn and Jake accidentally anger the spirit of a deceased being at a funeral and are nearly killed by it; however, James Baxter arrives at the last moment and cheers the spirit up. The impetus for the episode stemmed from a guest lecture Baxter gave at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) when Ward was a student; during the discussion, someone requested that he animate a horse on a beach ball, a concept which fixed itself into Ward's mind.

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