How to use in-sentence of “make sense of”:
– It helps us to organise our thoughts and make sense of them and the world around us.
– When Jesus came the early Christians had to make sense of the fact that God had come among them through the power of the Holy Spirit.
– Top down processing helps humans quickly make sense of their environment without having to think too much.
– Throughout history people have tried to make sense of dreams to learn things from them, and have often used them for divination or fortune-telling.
– Because a barcode reader merely captures and translates the barcode into numbers and/or letters, the data must be sent to a computer so that a software application can make sense of the data.
– He investigated them to find out what symbols they contained and how ancient people tried to make sense of the world around them.
– This, of course, is supposition, but it does make sense of the animal’s most extraordinary feature.

