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19 Sentences With "silly person"

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

Is this a silly person, or is this an angry person?
Still, it's my duty to tell you: Wise up, silly person!
"Well, listen, I am showing you what to do, silly person, 15 repetitions, three times, here's the move …" Khloé said.
"Well, listen, I am showing you what to do, silly person, 15 repetitions, three times, here's the move …" she said.
"Well, listen, I am showing you what to do, silly person, 15 repetitions, three times, here's the move…" Khloé said.
"Well, listen, I am showing you what to do, silly person, 203 repetitions, three times, here's the move …" she explained.
"I am not a woo-woo silly person," as she put it in 295, amidst a failed congressional bid in what is now Rep.
Journalist professor and all-around silly person Seth Abramson tweeted out: Please RETWEET THIS if you want Twitter to suspend Trump's account for repeated crimes, civil offenses, and violations of terms of service. pic.twitter.
"It's escaping to a kind of different world where I am just who I normally am anyway, and I can let that side, that sort of slightly immature, silly person come out a bit more than I normally do," he said.
The use of the phrase "Suck-egg" for "a silly person" is dated back to 1609 by the OED.
Please be Mister > Straight.” I don’t believe in that, either. I think we have to grow up and > look at why drugs are illegal ... I just don’t want people to believe the > hype, that if you take drugs you’re necessarily an evil villain. You might > be a silly person, or a weak person. But you’re not a bad person.
Scrivener stated: "some silly person has changed the Ψ into Υ (very awkwardly), which would throw it back to A.D. 985." The name of scribe was Theophilus, a monk. The place of origin of the codex is unknown. It is believed that Constantinople can be possible place of its origin. On the folio 7 there is erased Greek inscription from the 16th century.
It is native from Bangladesh, India and Bhutan through Indochina to China, Indonesia, and Brunei (BirdLife International 2008). Hair-crested drongos move in small flocks and are very noisy. The "spangled drongo," Dicrurus bracteatus is native on the east coast of Australia and its name is pejorative slang for a silly person. This may be due to its strange chattering and cackling.
Derived from raus is rausim meaning "empty", "dismissed away." A reminder of the missionary by German Catholic lay brothers are the words bruda from German Bruder for brother and prista from German Priester for priests. A relic of German colonialists' behaviour are invectives such as rinfi from German Rindvieh, literally cattle, but used also as invective for a silly person, and saise from German Scheiße, shit.
The Metal Hammer Podcast was originally presented by James Gill and Terry Bezer and contained "All of the news, headlines, general rantings and reviews" of the week. Gill and Beez coined the phrase "You Clahn" when describing a silly person. As of June 2011, Bezer had left Metal Hammer to pursue work elsewhere, and was replaced on the podcast by stand-up comedian Stephen Hill. Gill also left Metal Hammer on 3 February 2012, the date he last featured on the podcast.
Harrison would play violin during their play dates, which sparked enough jealousy in Ahn to ask his mother about lessons. He looks up to his sister as an influence and said, "She is the smartest, most caring, silly person I know, and I always strive to be just like her." He said he had a phase in middle school when he admired his mother's cooking and watched the cooking channel after school, thinking that he would like to be a chef, and enjoys making her spaghetti aglio e olio and his favorite kimchi soup. He describes his father as "the best father, mentor, role model, friend" and his "#1 fan".
Chris Carter said: > I had to speak with Bill several times; I spent hours with him on the > telephone talking about the character, because the actor felt that the > episode really made the character something that it wasn't. I tried to > explain to him, as I think Jim and Glen were trying to express, that even if > your mission in life is a destroyer, that you still have some hope in the > back of your mind that you can be a creator — and that this all of a sudden, > this vanity, is his vanity. And we see that so clearly here and it makes him > sort of a silly person.
Although he is dry and often exasperated when dealing with Michael Scott, the office manager, he seems to be a much more relaxed, silly person in social situations. Unlike Michael, Darryl is competent, ambitious, and innovative, and on several occasions late into the series he promotes ideas to corporate that seem to benefit the company greatly. Michael refers to him as "Mittah Rogers"—a nickname which began as "Regis" (as Darryl's last name is Philbin, a reference to Regis Philbin who is producer Michael Schur's father-in-law), then "Reeg", "Roger" and then finally settling on "Mittah Rogers". In contrast with this, Darryl almost always calls Michael "Mike" instead of by his full name (although he will call him by his full name when he becomes frustrated or annoyed with Michael's immaturity).
Edmund Leach argued in a classic 1964 paper that animal epithets are insulting when the animal in question is taboo, making its name suitable for use as an obscenity. For example, Leach argues that calling a person "a son of a bitch" or "you swine" means that the "animal name itself is credited with potency". In 1976, John Halverson argued that Leach's argument about taboos was "specious", and his "categorisation of animals in terms of 'social distance' and edibility is inconsistent in itself and corresponds neither to reality nor to the scheme of social distance and human sexuality it is claimed to parallel". Halverson disputed the association of animal epithets with potency, noting that calling a timid person a mouse, or a person who does not face reality an ostrich, or a silly person a goose, does not mean that these names are potent, taboo, or sacred.

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