What does to make an effort mean?
What does to make an effort mean?
If you make the effort to do something, you do it, even though you need extra energy to do it or you do not really want to.
Had to make do or due?
Make do is the correct spelling. Make due is a historical variant that is no longer accepted.
What’s another way to say make an effort?
What is another word for make effort?
attempt | try |
---|---|
push | embark on |
make an effort | take on |
try out | exert oneself |
give a fling | give it a burl |
Do efforts or make efforts?
“Doing an effort” is not correct. You do some work and you put some effort into doing the work. The idiomatic phrase to use here is make an effort. I can’t be more thankful for all the efforts you have made.
How do you use do in a sentence?
Examples of ‘make do’ in a sentence make do
- Well yesterday he just had to make do with the result.
- They would just have to make do with the school that was merely great.
- Most of us just make do with a box of bath salts.
- But we shall have to make do with just a notion.
- You’ll just have to make do with a bulky tablet.
Do you say do to or due to?
Although “due to” is now a generally acceptable synonym for “because,” “due to the fact that” is a clumsy and wordy substitute that should be avoided in formal writing. “Due to” is often misspelled “do to.”
Can you make do without?
To cope or manage to do something without all the resources that one would ideally like to have. “Make do” is often followed by “with” or “without,” depending on the context of the sentence.
How do you use effort in a sentence?
Effort sentence example
- I admire the effort and sacrifice you put into it.
- Some people just put more effort into distinguishing right from wrong than others.
- It took too much effort to look up at the sun to measure time.
- She made no effort to catch them, letting them fall at her feet.
Do you make effort?