Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

8 Sentences With "go walkabout"

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

Many of his most ardent critics and naysayers never would go walkabout when Churchill had the floor at Commons.
Seals having a wander inland are an occasional occurrence, but this cub is perhaps a little too young to go walkabout.
The episode was devised following a lecture given by writer Mike Bullen and executive producer Andy Harries at the Screen Producers Association of Australia conference in November 2000.de Lisle, Rosanna (11 December 2000). "Manchester six go walkabout". The Sydney Morning Herald (Fairfax Media): p.
On 17 April 1993 at Victoria Park, Melbourne, an Australian Football League match between Collingwood and St Kilda Football Club was taking place. St Kilda player Nicky Winmar was racially abused by members of the Collingwood cheersquad, who yelled for him to "go and sniff some petrol" and "go walkabout where you came from". At the conclusion of the game, Winmar lifted up his jumper and, facing to the crowd, pointed to his skin. The following day, a photograph of Winmar's gesture was published by Sunday Age and Sunday Herald Sun.
The introduction of the huge Class XX 2-8-8-2 Mallets in 1918 necessitated construction of appropriate shop facilities at East Salamanca. This included electric jacks that could lift the Mallet off the ground. Among the other annoyances that management had to face, one peculiar to steam locomotive operation plagued the BR&P.; In addition to the accidents resulting from employee carelessness, in which doors and walls were destroyed by the impacts of engines that weren't stopped in time, the engines themselves were prone to go walkabout if left idling with a head of steam.
MaxMyInterest (Max) is a financial technology (FinTech) service operated by Six Trees Capital LLC. Max is a software platform that allocates individuals’ cash among their own bank accounts so that they earn the most interest possible while staying within the limits for FDIC government-deposit insurance."Deposits Go Walkabout", The Economist, May 2, 2015"A New Way to Chase Yield", CNBC Power Lunch, December 17, 2015 The service works for both individuals and their financial advisors.Kitces, Michael, "The Unconsidered Consequences Of Rising Interest Rates", The Nerd's Eye View, January 11, 2016 Headquartered in New York City, Six Trees was founded by former Citigroup investment banker Gary E. Zimmerman in 2013.
Once in New York, Mick is perplexed by local behaviour and customs but overcomes problematic situations including two encounters with a pimp and two attempted robberies. After this Sue realises her true feelings for him, and they kiss. At a society dinner at her father's home in honour of Sue's safe return and of Mick's visit, Richard proposes marriage to Sue, and in a haze of confused emotions, she initially accepts in spite of Richard having recently revealed his self-centered and insensitive "true colours" during a period of intoxication. Mick, disheartened at Sue's engagement, decides to go "walkabout" around the United States, but Sue has a change of heart and, deciding not to marry Richard, follows Mick to a subway station.
This 1993 photograph of Nicky Winmar is one of the most famous in Australian sporting history. In a match for St Kilda against Collingwood in Round 4 of the 1993 season, Winmar was racially abused by members of the Collingwood cheer squad, who yelled for him to "go and sniff some petrol" and "go walkabout where you came from". At the conclusion of the game, which St Kilda won by 22 points, Winmar lifted up his jumper and, facing to the crowd, pointed to his skin. The following day, a photograph (pictured right) of Winmar's gesture, taken by Wayne Ludbey, was published in the Sunday Age under the headline "Winmar: I'm black and proud of it", with the Sunday Herald Sun publishing a similar photograph under the caption "I've got guts". Winmar's gesture, described as a "powerful statement", an "anti-racist symbol",Lawson, Mark (2012).

No results under this filter, show 8 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.