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make a point

VERB
  1. make a point of doing something; act purposefully and intentionally

How To Use make a point In A Sentence

  • It should not be possible for you to make more than the occasional typo, misedit, or improper word choice accidentally because every fiber of your being should be infused with the rules so that the default is standard grammar, spelling, and logical organization to make a point. Wired Campus
  • One of my big interests is alpine plants, so I make a point of going up mountains all around the world to see them. Times, Sunday Times
  • The usual botheration en route; love those people who make a point of getting in front of you, then drive below the posted limit. April – 2009 – The Bleat.
  • Many cariocas, as the residents of Rio de Janeiro are called, make a point of getting out of town long before things get started.
  • I thought at first that he was trying to make a point about how media images of violence are so multivalent.
  • But Shaft spends the entire movie partnered with his cop buddies, all of whom are made to make a point of saying how much trouble they'll be in for helping Shaft.
  • Comments: "Porn defines all women in terms of sex" sounds like exactly the kind of airheaded nonsense you normally make a point of skewering. The Policeman's Blog
  • He also wants to make a point about human suffering and affliction, which he does by bringing out the allegorical significance of the story.
  • It's a spectacular scene and I make a point of leaving my dictation and watching through the curtains each evening.
  • She does not make a point of calling attention to her status by the use of either titles or clerical garb.
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