make friendly
English
Verb
make friendly (third-person singular simple present makes friendly, present participle making friendly, simple past and past participle made friendly)
- To act in a friendly or conciliatory way.
- 1887, William Timothy Call, Josh Hayseed in New York, New York: Exceslsior, page 78:
- What surprised me most, though, was the way the gals hung round for free tickets. ¶ They didn’t make any bones of it, but come up and made friendly with me the easiest I ever experienced. It was so sorter onusual that it took me quite a spell to git used to their sociable ways.
- 1970, Joanne Greenberg, chapter 10, in In the Sign, New York: Avon, published 1972, page 120:
- “Here you have the word friendly,” the teacher said, pointing to another red-pencil wound. “You said, ‘dog and cat can not make friendly.’ We do not used that word in that way.”
- 1996, Cynthia Voigt, chapter 2, in Bad Girls, New York: Scholastic, page 49:
- She told them, the first time they came up to her to make friendly, that Blossom made her want to throw up.
- 2004, George Pelecanos, Hard Revolution, Waterville, Maine: Thorndike Press, Part 1, Chapter Eleven:
- He tried to make friendly with some black guys who were new to the neighborhood but got limp handshakes and ice-cool eyes in return.
- 2016 April 11, Neil McMahon, “Kerri-Anne Kennerley bares all for Mike Willesee on Sunday Night”, in The Sydney Morning Herald:
- Over many decades, Australian audiences have seen Kerri-Anne Kennerley do just about everything from making friendly with Hollywood superstars to doing the Macarena with the treasurer […]
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