The form make of the verb to make is used in the present and future tenses, and makes is used for the third person singular (he, she, or it makes).
Examples:
"She makes me crazy."
"It makes no sense."
"I need to make another try."
"How do you make a slingshot?"
"You can't make me!"
(*The noun make and its plural makes normally refer to models of cars.)
if you mean have record in a sentence then write a sentence that makes sense with that word
2 numbers that make 10
Presidents try their hardest but still make mistakes, which makes the people continue to antagonize them for being less than perfect.
Just make sure it makes sense within the sentence.I.E."I parked between the two cars."
yes we can make the pasteurization sentence, when we use the tense then u can make the sentence with pasteurization.
Makes is already plural. The singular is make.
"Make" is used for plural subjects or the pronouns "I" and "you" in interrogative sentences. For example, "Do they make their own decisions?" "Makes" is used for singular third-person subjects in interrogative sentences. For example, "Does he make his bed every day?"
what sentence can you make with dervish
the bill of rights makes America superb!:D
To use "grammatical" in a sentence, you could say: "She always makes sure her sentences are grammatically correct." This showcases the use of the word "grammatical" in the context of proper sentence structure.
Not a sentence
I will makes the contractoin I'll