Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"wallies" Definitions
  1. Central Scot
  2. false teeth; dentures

14 Sentences With "wallies"

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

The Sun was characteristically irreverent, describing the team as "Ice wallies" and criticizing the performance of Joe Hart, who conceded his second soft goal of the tournament.
39.24 Wallies, and Philoponus, Comm. in Arist. Anal. Pr., p. 126.20-23 Wallies.
In the book Wally travels to fantasy lands in search of Wizard Whitebeard's magical scrolls. The book introduces the second recurring Where's Wally character, Wizard Whitebeard. Readers are also asked for the first time to find the Wizard's scrolls. The book introduces "The Land of Wallies" and the concept that Wally is just one of many Wallies.
Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition. wally, n.2 citing "1974 Times 8 Aug. 2/4" The Wallies were involved in the organisation of the 1976 Trentishoe Whole Earth Fair.
After another surprise victory over Bristow in the 1986 MFI World Matchplay tournament,"Brennan Puts Out Bristow", Glasgow Herald, 11 October 1986, p. 19, retrieved 2010-10-31 The Crafty Cockney famously declared that "he kept losing to wallies." Steve has 3 brothers, (Nigel, Kevin and Trevor) and 1 sister, (Teresa).
The only music was provided by early synth pioneers Zorch, who set up stage facing the stones, and who had to cope with a poor PA system.Andy Worthington - It’s 25 Years Since The Last Stonehenge Free Festival The festival might have had little impact if it had stopped soon after the solstice was over, but by this time Wally had persuaded thirty people to stay on in the field beside the stone circle. They styled themselves “The Wallies of Wessex” and lived a makeshift, communal lifestyle in tents, a rickety polythene-covered geodesic dome and a small fluorescent tipi. Nigel Ayers, who visited at the time, said, "It was an open camp, inspired by a diversity of wild ideas, but with the common purpose of discovering the relevance of this ancient mysterious place by the physical experience of spending a lot of time there".Andy Worthington - It’s 25 Years Since The Last Stonehenge Free Festival The Wallies went to court in August,Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition.
The Wallies of Wessex were a group of people who squatted on ground close to Stonehenge in 1974. The Department of the Environment and the National Trust landowners started court proceedings to have the squatters evicted. The squatters, both to make a counter culture point and to protect themselves from court costs, all used aliases in court that included the name Wally. They lost the case and had to move a few feet to an alternative site, but the case was reported in the national press.
Also parts of the newspaper shows the Brooklyn Dodgers defeating the New York Yankees 6–2, and the weather which is fair and warmer, mentioning "warmer bros" (the beginning scenes such as brief view of the battle, the "Kaintucky" introduction, and the newspaper clips were removed on WKBD-TV Channel 50 in Detroit, Michigan in 1988). The following scene introduces the two leads, who start singing an idealistic song about how "the fighting ends" and about their new friendship. Or as Porky puts it: "Now we're pally-wallies". The clan members seem to belong to multiple species, many of their members being including chickens, ducks, and geese.
It was during this period that current club stalwart and legend, Brad Abbott, joined the club, from the Central Coast, and went on to captain premiership success in 2002. Another quality player during this period was tough cop, and NSW representative, Kenny Howe, who had previous playing experience in the Riverina and ACT. UNSW Australian National Football Club UNSW has its own proud history, with the 'Wallies' formed in 1962, and going on to win nine First Grade premierships in the SFA, during which time it produced its own list of stars, including Cliff Matson and Stuart Cadzow (who both won University 'Blues', and both went on to play with Easts).
At a warehouse, as Del Boy loads up the van with the latest item to flog called Kandy Dolls, Rodney tells him that he just joined a band that are styling themselves on Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Del points out that Rodney does not have any drums, as well as mention that he should not be around that "bunch of wallies", especially their wild lead singer, "Mental" Mickey Maguire, who once bit another man's ear off. It is then revealed that each Kandy Doll has a different voice chip meant for another toy, and the Trotter Brothers then drive off. Later, back at Nelson Mandela House, Del tells Albert that the Shamrock Club in Deptford, the "Paddies' Moulin Rouge", has no act for St. Patrick's Night since their resident band, the Dublin Bay Stormers, are in prison for their violent behaviour.
One night while dancing at Krypton's to Anne Clark's "Wallies", Dave decided to be a DJ. Dave's first gig was at Marty & Lenny's, a nightclub in New Rochelle, NY where the owners of the then predominantly freestyle music venue promoted a new music night. The night was promoted by Long Island's 92.7 WDRE, and Dave's eponymous DJ name "Dave the Wave" started to earn him recognition amongst fans of new wave, alternative and industrial dance music. From there, he landed a long-standing residency at BAR in New Haven, CT which lasted for over ten years. This helped him to land a spot reporting his top tracks to the Hot Dance Club Songs chart in Billboard, a highly touted, and difficult title to earn amongst DJs in the US with only 95 DJs in total submitting their weekly charts.
In 1982, Clark published her first album, The Sitting Room, with songs written by herself, the album placed in 11th place on The Top 100 Albums of 1983. On the following albums, Changing Places (1983), Joined up Writing (1984) and Hopeless Cases (1987), Clark benefited from an acquaintance from the Warehouse: keyboardist David Harrow contributed all the music as the co- author and producer. The songs created by this team, such as "Sleeper in Metropolis," "Our Darkness," and "Wallies," have since been considered milestones of the 1980s and 1990s. David Harrow's music of "Our Darkness" is sampled in Benny Benassi's 2003 hit "Love is Gonna Save Us." The song was also the main feature in the 2016/17 Women's Versace catwalk. Our Darkness has been considered as one of the 20 best industrial and EBM industrial records of all time.
Del answers that their mother Joan said to him on her deathbed to give Rodney all the encouragement he could, but Rodney points out that whatever they are arguing about, their mother always had something to say about it on her deathbed, such as a drunk Del telling Rodney to go and get fish and chips because Joan said "Send Rodney for the fish". Del then pays Rodney his share of the £300 booking fee, and tells him to just forget about Mental Mickey's group and move on. With the conversation over, the Trotter Brothers venture to the market to flog hooky Maltesers. One evening some time later, as Del is talking to Monkey Harris on the telephone about the Kandy Dolls, he watches the TVs and discovers to his complete horror that the group, now named A Bunch of Wallies and having hired a new drummer, are at #26 on the UK Singles Chart and performing their song on Top of the Pops.
In 2003, The Observer named the KLF's departure from the music business (and the BRITs performance in which the newspaper says "their legend was sealed") the fifth greatest "publicity stunt" in the history of popular music. A 2000 piece in The Daily Telegraph called the BRITs performance "violently antagonistic" and reported that the "music-business audience" was "stunned"; on the other hand, Piers Morgan writing shortly after the performance called the KLF "pop's biggest wallies". A 2004 listener poll by BBC 6 Music saw the KLF/K Foundation placed second in a list of "rock excesses", after The Who. A 2017 piece in The Guardian, pondering the rumoured return of The KLF, noted that "in the 25 years since their disappearance, nobody else has come up with anything that matches the duo’s extraordinary career"; another piece in the same newspaper in the same year, by a different author, called them "abstruse" and "pop’s greatest provocateurs", and their career "anarchic, anti-commercial and mostly ludicrous".

No results under this filter, show 14 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.