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make little of
verb
To belittle.
Exact(4)
The Koreans make little of the free-kick.
Ferrero, even by standing yards behind the baseline, could make little of it.
Generally, Creed likes to make little of nothing very much: a tiny tower of Lego, seven nails of ascending sizes banged into the wall, a slender ziggurat of planks.
Another limitation, says stem cell biologist Mickie Bhatia of McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, is that the resulting blood cells make little of the adult variety of hemoglobin, the body's oxygen-toting protein, suggesting that they haven't matured.
Similar(54)
I made little of the accidents.
For years, American textbooks made little of their expedition.
But the movie makes little of the confusion.
He made little of her queenship, nothing at all of her immense seniority.
Pastor's choreography is full of conventional skips and jumps, making little of this music.
Kitty's tragedy is that she has been declawed, but the movie makes little of it.
Here she is also a gifted cellist, but the movie makes little of her musical talents.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com