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make something of

  1. Render important or useful; improve. For example, Dad hoped Tim would make something of himself . [Late 1700s]

  2. Give undue importance to something, especially a problem or disagreement, as in Ann decided to make something of it when Bob said women's studies is not a real discipline . This usage sometimes is put as make something out of nothing , as in So what if Jim had coffee with your girlfriend—don't make something out of nothing . For an antonym, see make nothing of , def. 1.



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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

"My brother helped me out with his boss, got me a job on the scaffolding site and that just kept me ticking over, but it gave me that push, as in 'I don't want to be back doing this. I want to get back to boxing, really push on and make something of it'."

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"The moment the weather changes, the children go back to school and the tourists all go home, it's nice to have something different to make something of the season," she added.

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"They realised that I was all alone and I needed to make something of myself," he said.

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Vance tries to portray himself the way he did in his memoir and subsequent political career: a “local boy makes a good†story about a scrappy kid from rural Ohio who climbed his way out of poverty to make something of himself.

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Given recent trends, it may go without saying that the picture tries to make something of a “girl boss†out of Jeanne, the most prominent mistress of King Louis XV.

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