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To make something from scratch.
To make something by starting with the basic ingredients.
Exact(1)
What's interesting is when you start to make something with them," she says.
Similar(58)
We cut it and started to make something from the hay," and, soon "this hay ziggurat appeared".
One man who was definitely not happy, though, was Dean Richards, once the rock on which Leicester was built, now starting to make something of his Newcastle side.
When is the last time you started to make something but gave up before you finished because you didn't think anyone would like it?
And you start trying to make something out of them.
Start of by deciding to make something fairly simple such as apple pie.
There he explored ruins, sketched, and started thinking about how to make something new from the ancient buildings he saw.
It applied to everything in Peter's life whether it was gold, rugs, real estate, or even friends like me! Peter invested his time in me when I was starting out and trying to make something of myself.
I'm willing to walk into an anti-Trump march and start chanting anti-Clinton stuff — to make something happen, and then cover what happens.
The population is ageing, for a start – "So they've got to make something to entertain us" – and films now have a commercial lifespan far beyond box-office receipts, making teenagers' dominance of cinema seats less important.
By starting Army Man he "tried to make something that had no agenda other than to make you laugh".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com