make little of การใช้
- Working with a great story, Blakemore, a theater director, makes little of it.
- Kandinsky would ask us to make little of that, concentrating on Feininger's gifts.
- Schumann, who loved and campaigned for Schubert's music, could make little of them.
- She is also an aspiring singer-songwriter, but the movie makes little of her professional ambitions.
- "But I wouldn't make little of that, " said Josh Sapan, the president of Rainbow.
- Oil traders are making little of the OPEC conference.
- Here she is also a gifted cellist, but the movie makes little of her musical talents.
- He goes to purchase Chinese synthetic leather, because India makes little of the material and most of that is of low quality.
- Kwasniewski, however, criticized Kerry early this month for supposedly making little of Poland's contribution of troops in Iraq during the first presidential debate.
- That's always a possibility, of course, but the book makes little of the comparison, instead preferring to make new connections between the two heroes.
- Spain started strong with Joaquin Sanchez forcing a good save from Edwin van der Sar, but Fernando Morientes could make little of the rebound.
- Holmes could make little of the case at the time, but perhaps if someone had actually hired him, the outcome would have been different.
- Spain started the stronger with Joaquin Sanchez forcing a good save from Edwin van der Sar, but Fernando Morientes could make little of the rebound.
- They terrified by making little of it, for what officials and the press said bore no relationship to what people saw and touched and smelled and endured.
- As a matter of fact, even after her death Schopenhauer continued to speak against her, making little of her skills as a mother and portraying her as an all around selfish person.
- Consequently, campaign ads make little of Kennedy's national standing, instead stressing how his Senate clout can " make a difference for Massachusetts "-- a theme reminiscent of the promise he made three decades ago, with his brother in the White House, to do " more for Massachusetts ."