Get Free Checker

make sense

VERB
  1. be reasonable or logical or comprehensible

How To Use make sense In A Sentence

  • She is charged with the task of ensuring the government's lifelong learning plans make sense to the public.
  • Does it really make sense to conceive of a tutorial existing in isolation?
  • As described in Section 1.6, the constructive empiricist argues that one can make sense of the observable/unobservable distinction, even if observation is theory-laden. Beyond the Voice
  • I know this won't make sense to anyone else but I just have to get it out, in hopes that by writing it out loud I can figure it out, unmask it, and take away its power over me.
  • One thing was certain: she must have ten minutes to pull herself together, reactivate her brain to make sense of all this. TO HIS JUST DESSERTS
  • They teach students to make sense of history as contemporary secular historians make sense of it.
  • It will slam the door shut to the possibility of connecting to a greater reality lifeline that they can make sense from.
  • In theory, it might make sense to give judges the power to grant snooping applications. The Sun
  • Think about it for two ticks and it will make sense. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was like a thick-witted detective at a crime scene, unable to make sense of clues right before his eyes.
View all