make for

Verb

 * 1)  To set out to go (somewhere); to move towards.
 * 2)  To tend to produce or result in.
 * 3) * 2019 October 9, "Tiny cub gives lion a huge fright", :
 * A tiny cub is learning the art of stalking a little too well it seems. A video posted on social media shows the cub surprising its mamma and giving her a huge fright. The short clip makes for a delightful watch.
 * 1)  To confirm, favour, strengthen (an opinion, theory, etc.).
 * 2) * 1830, E.S. Carlos (translator), Galileo Galilei (author), “The Siderial [sic] Messenger”, reprinted in Louise Fargo Brown and George Barr Carson, Men and Centuries of European Civilization, Ayer Publishing (1971), ISBN 978-0-8369-2100-7, page 427:
 * Secondly, we will examine the Cœlestiall Phœnomena that make for the Copernican Hypothesis, as if it were to prove absolutely victorious;
 * A tiny cub is learning the art of stalking a little too well it seems. A video posted on social media shows the cub surprising its mamma and giving her a huge fright. The short clip makes for a delightful watch.
 * 1)  To confirm, favour, strengthen (an opinion, theory, etc.).
 * 2) * 1830, E.S. Carlos (translator), Galileo Galilei (author), “The Siderial [sic] Messenger”, reprinted in Louise Fargo Brown and George Barr Carson, Men and Centuries of European Civilization, Ayer Publishing (1971), ISBN 978-0-8369-2100-7, page 427:
 * Secondly, we will examine the Cœlestiall Phœnomena that make for the Copernican Hypothesis, as if it were to prove absolutely victorious;

Translations

 * Bulgarian: отправям се
 * French: se diriger vers
 * German: sich zusteuern auf ,
 * Irish: déan ar
 * Latin:
 * Russian:, , , , , , ,
 * Sorbian:
 * Lower Sorbian: směriś se
 * Welsh: cyrchu at/i/tuag at


 * Russian:, , (к ...),