make+sense

  • 11make\ sense — v. phr. 1. To be something you can understand or explain; not be difficult or strange. The explanation in the school book made no sense because the words were hard. Compare: make head or tail of 2. To seem right to do; sound reasonable or… …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 12make sense of —    If you make sense of something, you understand it or find the meaning.     I couldn t make sense of the instructions …

    English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • 13make sense of it — understand it, fathom it, see how it happened    He is my father, but I am not his son. Can you make sense of it? …

    English idioms

  • 14make sense of something — phrase to understand something that is complicated or unusual We’ve been trying to make sense of our dreams. Thesaurus: to understand somethingsynonym Main entry: sense * * * make ˈsense of sth idiom to understand sth that is di …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 15make sense of something — make sense of (something) to understand something. The community is trying to make sense of the tragedy …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 16make sense of something — to understand something that is complicated or unusual We ve been trying to make sense of our dreams …

    English dictionary

  • 17make sense — to be reasonable. This deal clearly makes sense in the long term. Usage notes: often used with words that describe amounts, like some, much, or any: Her idea doesn t make any sense …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 18make sense — 1) to be practical and sensible It makes sense to keep such information on disk. It made good sense to continue with the reforms. 2) to be easy to understand Her argument makes perfect sense to me …

    English dictionary

  • 19make sense — appear to be logical or sensible    Renting a car makes sense to me if it s not too expensive …

    English idioms

  • 20make sense — seem reasonable His proposal makes absolutely no sense …

    Idioms and examples