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25 Sentences With "noses into"

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

Some observers bump their noses into the mirror while looking into the artwork.
We don't have school districts and child protective services sticking noses into home-schooling families.
But home assistants such as Amazon Alexa, Google Home, and Mattel Aristotle are designed to butt their noses into conversations.
They turn their noses into snorkels, so they can keep breathing, even though the rest of their bodies are stuck underwater.
We use it to get away from our boring lives and stick our little noses into the lives of other more interesting people.
First, he began offering nose jobs, having realized that, when patients' brows were altered, it threw their noses into new, and sometimes unflattering, relief.
"Without singling out any neighbor, I would like to say that no one has any right to poke their noses into here," Grybauskaite told reporters.
The participants took a bite of bread and exhaled through their noses into the machine, so that the researchers could see which volatile compounds come out.
Should Britain leave the EU, the Charter of Fundamental Rights, which allows judges to poke their noses into any legislation that touches EU competencies, will no longer apply.
The problem for Bruno Le Maire and President Emmanuel Macron is that sticking their noses into Renault's affairs risks fraying a partnership with Nissan that is essential to the French carmaker's future.
They can bury their noses into another dog's butt, or into urine, or poop, [and with] their vomeronasal can really suck up these heavy molecules and extract more info out of it than we can.
Our host pours the first wine for us to taste and we stick our noses into the glasses, inhaling the tart and complex aromas of amber-hued Georgian wine, so different from wine anywhere else in the world.
"The police had to measure whether to act or not because there were kids running in the street and women running in the street and because curious people stick their noses into things that are high risk," he said.
The rats could have used any sense data to perform the task — from feeling the wind on their fur or sticking their little rat noses into the wind — but it was clear the whisker usage was far better at the task.
I remember excited interns poking their noses into the green room where we sat in our wigs and costumes, and I got to sing "Cool, Cool, Considerate Men," an uncomplimentary song about conservatives, to President Nixon, sitting unsmilingly in the front row.
Don Torino has spent much of his life around here, and he has watched as this stretch of the New Jersey Meadowlands has been transformed from a wasteland that sometimes forced residents to pinch their noses into something of a natural treasure.
"If I had to pick one word for the badger's experience, it would be intimate ," Foster decides, since, "when a badger goes out, its object is to bump into food": We bustled and grunted and elbowed and pushed and pressed our noses into the ground.
Some see in the government's reluctance to speak out a throwback: when it ruled a one-party state until 2000, Mr Peña's Institutional Revolutionary Party had a horror of involvement in the internal politics of other countries, for fear they would poke their noses into Mexican affairs.
As anyone who has seen Robin Hardy's British cult classic "The Wickerman" (1973) will know, things never end well for outsiders who poke their noses into an isolated community's pagan festivities—sex and ritual sacrifice are usually involved—and "Midsommar" comes to much the same conclusion as that film, or indeed any other folk-horror mystery.
I can vaguely remember some of the comments made by Mr Kirk at the time towards the kinds of professional stickybeaks who poked their noses into things he was doing.
Mora, José Manuel. (1999). White-nosed coati Nasua narica (Carnivora: Procyonidae) as a potentialpollinator of Ochroma pyramidale (Bombacaceae). Revista de Biología Tropical 47(4):719-721 The coati were observed inserting their noses into the flowers of the tree and ingesting nectar, while the flower showed no subsequent signs of damage. Pollen from the flowers covers the face of the coati following feeding, and later disseminates through the surrounding forest following detachment.
In June 2013 he told Economics and Life online journal that > The US, which presents itself as a bastion of democracy, has in fact been > carrying out minute-by-minute surveillance of tens of millions of citizens > of Russia and other countries. Following this remark which was in reference to Edward Snowden's leak, he referred to anti-gay law in Russia that it is an American reproach of sticking their noses into the personal correspondence of tens of millions of Russian citizens. His daughter Anastasia Zheleznyak lives in London.
The soldiers happily put down their arms and celebrated by putting their noses into their bags of hashish. When all was quiet around the pasha's tent, Nora retrieved a war dagger that her father had given her, a dagger that had been passed through her family for many generations. It was believed the dagger had magical powers, for no one who had carried it had died from wounds inflicted by opponents—highly unusual at that time and in this turbulent region. Nora stabbed the pasha, kicked him on back of his head, and choked him so he could not scream.
The series centred on a group of teenagers, two brothers and a sister; Michael, Jason and Samantha Mellop. A year earlier, their mother has died and their family business, 'The Lazy Daisy Nursery' is run by their rationalist father Bill and absent-minded Aunt Josey. The general plot of both seasons were the strange events that the Mellop teens would often get caught up in, without their father or aunt noticing and/or believing them. As well as the Mellops coming across the adventures, another family would often stick their noses into the situation when not wanted.
She published her first etiquette book Etiquette in Society, in Business, in Politics, and at Home (1922, frequently referenced as Etiquette) when she was 50; it became a best-seller, with updated versions continued to be popular for decades, and it made her career. After 1931, Post spoke on radio programs and wrote a column on good taste for the Bell Syndicate; it appeared daily in some 200 newspapers after 1932. In her review of Claridge's 2008 biography of Post, The New York Times Dinitia Smith explains the keys to Post's popularity: > Such books had always been popular in America: the country’s exotic mix of > immigrants and newly rich were eager to fit in with the establishment. Men > had to be taught not to blow their noses into their hands or to spit tobacco > onto ladies’ backs. Arthur M. Schlesinger, who wrote “Learning How to > Behave: A Historical Study of American Etiquette Books” in 1946, said that > etiquette books were part of “the leveling-up process of democracy,” an > attempt to resolve the conflict between the democratic ideal and the reality > of class. But Post’s etiquette books went far beyond those of her > predecessors.

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