Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

18 Sentences With "bad names"

How to use bad names in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bad names" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bad names". Mastering all the usages of "bad names" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Lovesick is what happens when great shows are given bad names.
So iPad, Pixel, Surface, all bad names probably for high-end tech products.
He has also called James L. Dolan, the owner, a bunch of bad names.
"Evacuation Day is what results when bad names happen to perfectly good holidays," a local historian said.
She fired back  though, saying he was a bully and called her several bad names, while also making it difficult to co-parent.
It featured an immense installation of equipment (which Phillips deems an "anthropological extravaganza") and a performance that invited visitors to erase the "bad names" that sanmen had been called.
And in 1916, city officials were seeking to reconcile the waning Irish political ascendancy with growing sympathy toward Britain during World War I. "Evacuation Day is what results when bad names happen to perfectly good holidays," Mr. Baker said in an interview.
Trump's shameless pattern of pardons "If you find yourself in a bit of a legal pickle and you're now wondering how to get out of prison, you might want to think about writing a glowing book about President Trump, or, writing an op-ed in which you call Robert Mueller a few bad names," Jake Tapper said on CNN Thursday afternoon.
So I believe that we need to be aware of the precipitous decline in the white race, and I think it's good for people to be proud of your heritage, whatever heritage that might be, but particularly for white people because the whites now are so afraid to be proud of their heritage because they're called bad names if they are.
People with such "bad" names often used official Christian names in everyday life when they grow up.
Glaurung utilizes negative logizomai by calling Túrin's ways evil and giving him a list of "bad" names. Túrin finally changes his name to Turambar which in a way tempts fate as it is close to the accursed name Túrin. This change of name, and consequently identity, prevents anyone from finding him. He ends by defiantly mastering his own fate and killing himself.
Amish school in Pike Township, Bradford County, Pennsylvania The Amish stress strict obedience in their children, and this is taught and enforced by parents and preachers. Several passages in the Bible are used to support this view. Their children, as with all children, may resist a parent's request. However, things such as tantrums, making faces, calling others bad names, and general disobedience are rare because the children are raised to comply with strict social codes.
The reformed Battered Wives, consisting of Toby Swann (guitar and vocals), Larry "Jasper" Klassen (bass and vocals), John Gibb (guitar) and Cleave Anderson (drums),"Bands With Very Bad Names".FYI Music News, David Farrell 09/18/2015 released their first eponymous album in 1978. This spawned the hit singles "Daredevil", "Suicide", "Lover's Balls", and "Uganda Stomp (Bomp Idi Bomp)", which poked fun at the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. Their second album was released in 1979 on Bomb Records and was titled Cigarettes.
Her surname is variously given in the documents as Bibber, Biber and Vibber. Sarah Bibber v. Sarah Good: Bibber was described by those who testified against her as a "loose-tongued creature, addicted to fits," a woman who quarreled often with her husband when she would call him "very bad names," would have "strange fits when she was crossed," a woman of turbulent spirit and "double tongued." She was observed to be "very idle in her calling" and given to gossiping and making mischief among her neighbors.
The term rafida followed the Shi'a from a very early period, originating, according to one source, in the uprising of Zayd ibn Ali against the Umayyad Caliphate. Rafida referred to those Kufans who deserted and refused to support Zayd, who had a policy not to condemn the first two Rashidun Caliphs, saying he never heard his family call them bad names. Zayd ibn Ali considered Ali the most supreme after Muhammad, but refused to condemn the caliphate of Abu Bakr and Umar for diplomatic purposes in his uprising to increase his support according to shia sources. He viewed the caliphate of Abu Bakr & Umar as a test from God to see if people would reject Ali's authority once again according to shia sources.
These menaces include parking inspectors themselves, people with annoying mobile phone ringtones, parents who give their children bad names, people with personalised "wanker" number plates, people over-proud of their tattoos, people who wear cheesy T-shirts with lame messages and people who wear their pants too low. Another Morrow segment is "Open Mic", in which he uses the public address system of a shopping centre, grocery store or pokies club to deliver a 'community service' announcement such as 'Please go home' or 'Can we please have a minute's silence?'. In November 2006, Morrow filled in as presenter on 702 ABC Sydney for the Breakfast and Evenings programs. He also presented the Breakfast Show on 702 for the 2008 Australia Day Public Holiday.
He also said there might have been two women, as other testimonies claimed, but he only saw one: "They say there were two, but I took notice of but one, as I hope God will save me: there might have been two, though I only saw one: that is a fact". Therefore, he stroke her hand and the woman insulted him for being a foreigner, he said "she called me several bad names [...] among which French bugger, d-ed Frenchman, and a woman-hater, were the most audible". By then he was going away when a man struck him with a fist, asking him how he dared strike a woman. He was beat by them and other people who surrounded him, but found a way to escape, even if they then caught him.
970: honorary is followed by honour. Dr Johnson did comment on its length in his 1765 edition of The Plays of William Shakespeare: Commenting on this, antiquarian Joseph Hunter wrote in 1845: In 1858, Charles Dickens wrote an essay Calling Bad Names for the weekly magazine Household Words he edited at the time; it starts with the Love's Labour's Lost quote and uses it to satirize the scientific publications that use too many Latin words: James Joyce also used this word in his mammoth 1922 novel Ulysses, during the Scylla and Charybdis episode; when Stephen Dedalus articulates his interpretation of Hamlet: In 1993 U.S. News & World Report used the word in its original meaning with reference to a debate about new words being used in the game of Scrabble: In the American animated television series Pinky and the Brain's 1995 episode "Napoleon Brainaparte", the word is defined as "with honorablenesses". Jeff Noon 2001 book of experimental poetry, Cobralingus, used the fictional Cobralingus Engine to remix this word in the style of electronic music to create a prose poem entitled "Pornostatic Processor".

No results under this filter, show 18 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.