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17 Sentences With "nut cases"

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

This is it: Only nut cases want to be president.
"Heck is an absolute stooge for these right-wing nut cases," Mr. Reid said.
And sometimes the artists here edge too close to the nut cases' side for comfort.
Flat Earth Indonesia dismisses the Flat Earth Society as a bunch of nut cases too obsessed with old NASA conspiracy theories.
Yeah, the only reason nut cases are involved in cannabis supply is because our government has frightened off the sensible people.
" He said that the Secret Service thought it was "a nightmare" and that it would invite "the nut cases to come forward.
I loved Mark O'Connell's article about two nut cases (and their cause) who show where death denial, a quintessential American condition, leads when taken to its extreme.
Of all the places where you really do not want to meet a couple of nut cases with rifles, a zoo full of "wild things in boxes" ranks high.
In addition to assorted nut-cases and scaredy-cats, "The Old Dark House" is well-stocked with warped mirrors, gargoyle banisters and a canine statue suggesting the Egyptian god Anubis.
"Up until this campaign you always thought that you couldn't have two nut cases in the second round," said Catherine Fieschi, who researches the French electorate as head of the consulting company Counterpoint.
They get into trouble, because the ones that are platforms for free speech are used by a mixture of nut cases and people who want to test the boundaries of what are often countries that are far from First Amendment, free speech environments.
And into that vacuum come right-wing nut cases, opportunists and grifters and narcissists like the president of the United States, and in the extreme, actual Nazis and white supremacists and, you know, populists of that flavor, who we shouldn't want to empower and we're empowering them, not just in the States, but I mean it's even worse in Europe.
The Brazil-nut poison frog is diurnal and feeds on ants, termites and other small invertebrates. The eggs are laid on the ground where they are guarded by the male. When they hatch, it carries the tadpoles to temporary pools such as water holes in trees and stumps, and water-filled empty nut cases on the forest floor. Here the tadpoles develop rapidly, devouring mosquito larvae, smaller tadpoles, and other creatures that share these ephemeral pools, as well as suitably-sized plant material.
Young Earth creationist organizations such as Answers in Genesis and Creation Ministries International have criticized Baugh's claims saying he "muddied the water for many Christians ... People are being misled." Don Batten, of Creation Ministries International wrote: "Some Christians will try to use Baugh's 'evidences' in witnessing and get 'shot down' by someone who is scientifically literate. The ones witnessed to will thereafter be wary of all creation evidences and even more inclined to dismiss Christians as nut cases not worth listening to." Answers in Genesis lists the "Paluxy tracks" as arguments "we think creationists should NOT use" [emphasis in original].
Overfield claims to have been out of politics for 15 years when he decided to become active again. When he joined the Reform Party of Canada, he claims to have "let the Reform Party executive know about his political past, and they had no problems with it." Overfield stated that Reform Party member Harry Robertson admitted him to the Party and that future Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper was well aware of Overfield's past involvement in far right groups. Harper denied such knowledge and stated that he had been "building issues into the Reform Party's platform to actively discourage extremists and 'nut cases'" at the time of Overfield's membership.
Reviewers Joanne Kaufman and Betsy Kline liken the novel to other fiction of the 1990s in which a woman leaves her life and family behind, including Anne Tyler's Ladder of Years (1995), Kathryn Harrison's Exposure (1993) and the short story "Crocodile Tears" by A. S. Byatt (anthologized in 1998). The novelist Karen Karbo, reviewing the novel in The New York Times, writes: > With '"Layover," Zeidner joins the ranks of Doris Lessing, Margaret Atwood > and Fay Weldon, all of whom have written in the women-spiraling-into-madness > genre. But Claire is something new. Unlike would-be female nut cases from an > earlier time, she doesn't set off on her journey needing to shuck her good- > wife persona.
Bow's first fiction book, a children's fantasy entitled The Forbidden Jewel, was published in 1987 and was endorsed by Kate Bush by writing the foreword "If you like adventure, fantasy and magic, then this is the book for you". His next novel, All Manner of Magic, was the best-selling children's book at the 1990 Singapore International Book Fair – a book fair held annually at the World Trade Center. In 1992, Bow wrote four books for the well-known Australian characters, the Kangaroo Creek Gang series, entitled Treasure Map, The Liar Bird, Superstickious and One Joke Too Many. The "Mythbusters" series of books have published and sold internationally, and include Mythbusters – First Cases (1991), Mythbusters – Nut Cases (1993) (School Book Fairs' Book of the Term in the autumn of 1993), and Mythbusters – Real-Life Adventures in the World of the Supernatural (1996), published by Puffin Books.

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