How to Use make a buck in a Sentence
make a buck
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The best ways to make a buck, spend it, save it, grow it, borrow it, give it or talk about it.
—Jeanne Sahadi, CNN, 6 July 2021
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But the majority of hacks seem to be about selling the data to make a buck.
—Ravi Sen, The Conversation, 13 May 2021
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Stewart, of course, was but one of the many characters looking to make a buck off tragedy.
—Washington Post, 22 Apr. 2022
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These odds and ends all come from sellers looking to break through and make a buck on Black Friday.
—Amanda Hoover, WIRED, 20 Nov. 2023
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Small businesses are trying to make a buck while the getting is good.
—William Dunkelberg, Forbes, 8 June 2022
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Three of the last eight Preakness winners went off at less than even-money, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t ways to make a buck.
—Frank Vespe, Baltimore Sun, 20 May 2022
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For those looking to make a buck selling their wares, 6-foot-long tables can be reserved for $20.
—John Benson, cleveland, 4 Aug. 2021
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Lots and lots of ideas are floating around about how to leverage generative AI to make a buck.
—Lance Eliot, Forbes, 29 Dec. 2022
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So much of our modern moral outrage comes down to trying to hustle to make a buck...or 10 million.
—Karina Elwood, Washington Post, 3 May 2023
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It was waved by a teenager trying to make a buck getting fans to park in the family driveway.
—San Diego Union-Tribune, 18 Sep. 2022
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When to Use It: Anytime to call in a doe, or during the rut—especially the late rut—to make a buck think there’s a doe and fawns nearby.
—Scott Bestul, Field & Stream, 22 Sep. 2020
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Not all charter schools are out to make a buck, and charters run for profit are not everywhere in the nation.
—Peter Greene, Forbes, 19 Mar. 2021
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The bane of Boy Scouts and cheerleaders out to make a buck, automatic washes handle most of the world's cars.
—Benjamin Hunting, Car and Driver, 11 Nov. 2022
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New businessmen would appear, anxious to make a buck by catering to the interest in the sport.
—Dan McLaughlin, National Review, 11 Mar. 2022
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Policies continue to drain wealth and make a buck any way it can be made to benefit the system white people gain.
—Tiffany Eve Lawrence, Parents, 4 Feb. 2024
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But every fairy tale must have a villain, or at least somebody whose priority is to make a buck.
—Globe Columnist, BostonGlobe.com, 5 Oct. 2022
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Here, Miller thought, was a guy in the richest city in the world, out trying to make a buck in historically disastrous weather.
—Eric Lach, The New Yorker, 21 Sep. 2021
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All the while, Brandon — and others like him all across the country — have kept the cash moving from donors and businesses to 18-year-old college athletes trying to make a buck.
—Kevin Reynolds, The Salt Lake Tribune, 31 May 2022
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But what's an extra 20 interviews if each one helps a pal make a buck, or tens of thousands of them, or helps to build a carpeted stairway to the next valence of fame?
—Brennan Kilbane, Allure, 23 Feb. 2023
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As international tensions rose in the summer and fall of 1962, Byrne went door to door trying to make a buck — and failed miserably.
—Thomas Bishop, Baltimore Sun, 13 May 2024
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But instead of being just a quick way to make a buck, Friday the 13th became one of the longest-running horror franchises ever.
—Keith Langston, Peoplemag, 13 Oct. 2023
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Private businesses have long had to figure out how to make a buck under threat of being squashed by the authorities.
—New York Times, 27 Aug. 2021
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Suddenly, day traders trying to make a buck saw themselves as enacting revenge for 2008.
—James McElroy, Washington Examiner, 4 Mar. 2021
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Spann’s lawyer, meanwhile, told the jury in his closing remarks that Spann was just like any other drug dealer or hustler trying to make a buck on the West Side, not some powerful boss who called the shots.
—Jason Meisner, chicagotribune.com, 8 Nov. 2021
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This speculative boom is, in a sense, something internet entrepreneurs have been doing for decades: buying up domain names to make a buck.
—Scott Nover, Quartz, 16 Aug. 2022
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However, de Melo also underscored that the drug trade in the Middle East is far from clear cut, and enemies often work together to make a buck.
—Fox News, 9 July 2020
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People have a major interest in continuing to pump satellites into orbit to make life better down below and maybe make a buck or two along the way.
—Ike Morgan | [email protected], al, 7 Dec. 2020
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Most nursing homes are for-profit, and private equity firms are increasingly gobbling them up to make a buck at the expense of residents.
—The Editors, Scientific American, 21 June 2021
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The major social-media and tech companies have already done their share to pervert civil discourse and shatter consensus and squelch reason, all to make a buck.
—Sam Lipsyte, Harper's Magazine, 12 Apr. 2022
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Reddit isn’t alone in trying to make a buck off licensing data, including that generated by users, for AI.
—Paresh Dave, WIRED, 15 Mar. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'make a buck.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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