Makes [verb]

Definition of Makes:

create, build

Synonyms of Makes:

● Manufacture

● Compose

● Prepare

● Form

● Produce

● Cause

● Generate

● Spawn

● Fashion

● Secure

● Frame

● Invent

● Constitute

● Cook

● Shape

● Mold

● Whip

● Accomplish

● Parent

● Construct

● Hatch

● Forge

● Beget

● Engender

● Effect

● Assemble

● Arrange

● Procreate

● Fabricate

● Conceive

● Originate

● Synthesize

● Initiate

● Adjust

● Brew

● Occasion

● Bring about

● Cook up

● Draw on

● Dream up

● Knock off

● Put together

● Dash off

● Get ready

● Give rise to

● Lead to

● Tear off

● Throw together

● Whip out


Opposite/Antonyms of Makes:

● Calculate

● Stop

● Halt

● Discourage

● Crush

● End

● Confuse

● Separate

● Divide

● Kill

● Finish

● Fail

● Tell truth

● Lose

● Give up

● Break

● Neglect

● Measure

● Veto

● Refute

● Refuse

● Disallow

● Deny

● Renounce

● Demote

● Prevent

● Dissuade

● Terminate

● Disorganize

● Disorder

● Disarrange

● Derange

● Scatter

● Disperse

● Ignore

● Demolish

● Dismantle

● Raze

● Ruin

● Destroy


Sentence/Example of Makes:

The Seven-score and four on the six middle Bells, the treble leading, and the tenor lying behind every change, makes good Musick.

It seems to be a true instinct which comes before education and makes education possible.

Sometimes necessity makes an honest man a knave: and a rich man a honest man, because he has no occasion to be a knave.

On four bells there are four times as many changes as on three; that is—four times six changes, which makes Twenty-four.

On three bells are three times as many changes as there are on two; that is—three times two changes, which makes six.

This will often save the foliage from drying up, a happening which makes the plants rather unsightly.

The conception of the relation of this institution with them as co-operative makes headway slowly.

It was one of those long moments that makes a fellow draw his breath sharp when he thinks about it afterward.

I asked him to tell me how he produced a certain effect he makes in his arrangement of the ballad in Wagner's Flying Dutchman.

He will tell you about the success he had in America; it quite makes up for the defeat of the British army in the Revolution.