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Sentences with mark

mark
M m
  • The mark appreciated 12 per cent against the dollar.
  • Set the oven at gas mark 4.
  • Any little bit of dirt will mark that fabric.
  • Be careful not to mark the floor with your shoes.
  • ...his Mark II Ford Cortina.
  • An owner's mark
  • I have marked the event on my calendar.
  • The dog marked the base of the tree by urinating.
  • A question mark
  • He is not up to the mark
  • X marks the spot where the suspect was last seen.
  • Use a bookmark to mark your place.
  • He has the mark of an athlete
  • A person of little mark
  • In AM, use guard, cover
  • He left his mark on German literature
  • Gas mark 5
  • The car is a Mark 4
  • A Mark 3 Cortina
  • His face was marked by anger
  • To mark out an area for negotiation
  • To mark someone as a criminal
  • To mark the book at one pound
  • mark my words
  • She marks fairly
  • Punctuation marks
  • Politeness is a mark of good upbringing
  • A mark of B in history
  • Failing to come up to the mark
  • A man of mark
  • To leave one's mark in history
  • A tower as a mark for fliers
  • Abilities that mark one for success
  • A smile marking happiness
  • Scientific discoveries that marked the 19th century
  • mark my words
  • To mark examination papers
  • The dogs are always rubbing against the wall and making dirty marks.
  • Leather overshoes were put on the horses' hooves to stop them marking the turf. [VERB noun]
  • He made marks with a pencil.
  • The bank marks the check 'certified'. [V n quote]
  • ...a simple scoring device of marks out of 10, where '1' equates to 'Very poor performance'.
  • You have to give her top marks for moral guts.
  • He was marking essays in his small study. [VERB noun]
  • Unemployment is rapidly approaching the one million mark.
  • The mark of a civilized society is that it looks after its weakest members. [+ of]
  • It was a mark of his unfamiliarity with Hollywood that he didn't understand that an agent was paid out of his client's share. [+ of]
  • A huge crater marks the spot where the explosion happened. [VERB noun]
  • The announcement marks the end of an extraordinary period in European history. [VERB noun]
  • The four new stamps mark the 100th anniversary of the British Astronomical Association. [VERB noun]
  • Tragedy has marked Wilmette's life. [VERB noun]
  • Her opposition to abortion and feminism mark her as a convinced traditionalist. [VERB noun + as]
  • ...Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand, who so effectively marked Michael Owen. [VERB noun]
  • The government gave 30 million marks for new school books.
  • A day marked by rain.
  • To mark each box with an X.
  • To mark the final exams.
  • We marked all the books with prices.
  • To mark out a plan of attack.
  • To mark passages to be memorized.
  • To be marked out for promotion.
  • To mark approval with a nod.
  • Mark my words!
  • To mark a change in the weather.
  • He set out to make his mark as a writer.
  • On your mark! Get set! Go!
  • My first guess was wide of the mark.
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