Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

14 Sentences With "slobby"

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

His scenes include everything from comedic pauses to jaunty music and ridiculously slobby outfits.
You start to see the basic bravery, principles, and good heart behind Lister's slobby, rude exterior.
An Appraisal In my high school's production of "The Odd Couple," I played Roy, one of slobby Oscar Madison's poker buddies.
The Odd Couple is a story of '70s masculinity, a push-pull between a slobby Peter Pan and a (female-coded) uptight neat freak.
Mr. Ifans is the occasion here, in a performance light years removed from his scene-stealing screen turn as Hugh Grant's slobby roommate in "Notting Hill," which first brought him to a broader public.
The TV show starred Jack Klugman as the slobby Oscar and Tony Randall as the finicky Felix, and though it was never a breakout hit, Mr. Klugman won two Emmy Awards and Mr. Randall one.
It is here that Hillary, who is convinced she'll lose the forthcoming primary, discusses strategy with her campaign manager, Mark (a perfectly slobby Zak Orth), and a jeans-wearing Bill — who appears, in an inspired entrance, filling the doorway like a space-clogging behemoth out of Dr. Seuss.
Yet Anna's robotic poise and eagerness to please recall Ms Kidman's role in the 2014 remake of "The Stepford Wives"—and there is something weird about the children's willingness to discuss menstruation and body hair with their parents (besides, they keep arguing over their "MP3 players"—who says "MP3 players" instead of "iPods", anyway?) The most mysterious facet of Steven's existence is his relationship with Martin (Barry Keoghan, of "Dunkirk"), a slobby, slack-jawed 16-year-old who keeps turning up at his house and at the hospital where he works.
Instead: a fuzzy oversize Steven Alan cardigan that put me in mind of Kurt Cobain's "Unplugged" vintage sweater; a thin gold chain, worn with a plain T-shirt and hitting midsternum, reminiscent to me of that worn by Fassbinder's young hustler character in 1975's "Fox and His Friends"; a Rodarte sweatshirt I bought at a sample sale after I saw a paparazzi picture of Drake wearing it at a club; clear-framed, oversize glasses of the sort Marc Jacobs used to wear in his slobby-hot days in the mid-2000s; and so on.
Im not interested in the dumb, slobby, burger-eating, beer-drinking unsocially aware girls.
Eddie and Richie are two pathetic, misogynistic, slobby flatmates living in a filthy, damp flat at 11 Mafeking Parade in Hammersmith, London. Mayall described them as "unemployed survivors". They spend their time concocting desperate schemes to convince women to have sex with them, including buying sex spray, forging money, and pretending to be aristocrats. Their plans are never successful however, and the stress of their miserable lives can cause them to become irritable with each other.
The core characters at the start of the series were the rogue Tamlin, a drunken, slobby version of Robin Hood, and his gangmates: the witch Atra, fan-girl-turned-gang-member Ragnarok, and Jake the Gnome. The gang have since been joined by the half-elven witch Kel, who has become the de facto lead of the comic. Former royal jester Jodoque joined later. Tamlin left the gang in the storyline The Corby Tribe and has not been seen since.
Wile E. promptly does this, rigging up a carrot in the patch to a boulder (which should fall off and crush Bugs), and hides. The rabbit then climbs up to harvest the carrots while singing ("Carrots wait for no one, so I pick them now, before they are eaten, by some slobby cow..."), and picks up the rigged carrot. But the trap does not activate, and, in frustration, Wile E. proceeds to check whether the trap works or not. Upon touching the rope, the trap activates, making the rock boulder fall.
The actor starred in the 2011 comedy Horrible Bosses, directed by Seth Gordon, with Jennifer Aniston, Jason Bateman, Charlie Day, Jason Sudeikis and his Miami Vice co-star Jamie Foxx. The film focuses on a trio of employees who plot to murder their tyrannical superiors. The London Observers Mark Kermode wrote that although the film would have benefited from a tighter script, Farrell and Jamie Foxx had juicy roles which they "riff with panache". Michael Phillips of the Los Angeles Times wrote that Farrell brought "massive, slobby relish" to his role as Sudeikis's cocaine-fiend boss.

No results under this filter, show 14 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.