Answered
in sentence
2045 examples of Answered in a sentence
There is also a "Killer Card" and if the contestant picks the girl who has that vile scroll, but he has
answered
properly, nothing happens.
If he's
answered
wrong, the game goes into Sudden Death and has to answer another question.
Why is this question never
answered?
All or even some of the questions about his past that we wondered about in the original could've been
answered.
prayers,
answered.
I'm not suggesting that the film makers could have
answered
these questions.
the storyline is clever and when all your questions are
answered
watching one episode, 100 more are raised.
Things like this are not
answered
in Pialat's condescending docu-drama style with long speeches and even longer scenes that don't add up.
The question is never
answered
one way or the other.
When I saw this as a child, it
answered
all of my questions and dispelled any fears or misconceptions that I had.
The movie somehow represented some part of me and
answered
some of my questions.
Due to my interest in acting, mainly in High School productions, I, along with my five brothers and sisters and Mother who was a bit of a ham herself,
answered
a "cattle call" for crowd scenes at Benton Airfield.
Following the screening of this film at the Minneapolis International Film Festival, Ed Radtke, M.S. Nieson, and one of the film's coordinators spoke about the film and
answered
any questions the audience had.
When asked a question about distribution, Radtke unfortunately
answered
with details about distributors' unwillingness to release a film because it may not be the easiest film to market.
Men who've
answered
personal ads in the lonely hearts column featuring poetry are being found naked, face down on their beds.
When asked if I liked "Star Wars" or "Star Trek" better, I
answered "'
Battlestar Galactica'-- the original!"
I wish questions about Sadie's time in San Francisco had been
answered.
I worried that the my work on my laptop might have suffered but I watched the pig and
answered
emails even with this diversion I still hated it.
a real story, a real account, a real movie.....one of the best of all time!! if anyone had any questions on whether clint eastwood could do it again, they've been
answered.
Mimi Rogers gave a grand performance as did David Decovney, but I spent the entire movie wondering if it was coming from a Christian perspective, or if it was just an ill conceved thriller, and in the end that question was not
answered.
Its shown through the perspective of "Shue" the whole movie, a lot of unanswered questions and confusion left at the end is because she never had them answered.... and honestly all of the questions are
answered
if you pay close enough attention there is just no "WHY" but you can figure the "HOW" out.
Repeated flashbacks can be acceptable in telling a story but only when the question is answered, "Would the story work better being told in a more linear fashion"?
At several points I asked myself how the film could get worse only to find that the next scene eloquently
answered
my question.
Then the story finally unwinds and we find out why this woman runs from her family, which of course is very weak, and leaves the viewer full of questions that are never
answered.
In an interview, Dr. Amitabh Bachchan in all his modesty
answered
that he doesn't know direction and is happy being an actor.
The question why an explained pacifist kills her girl friend is
answered
in a too simplistic way, if the film suggests he was only having his ideas to make himself interesting and to seduce girls.
It
answered
a lot of questions asked about the series.
One of my life's greatest enigmas has been
answered
and now I plan to try and locate the movie from the vaults of Movie of the Week which gave rise to Mystery of the week which gave rise to McMillan and Wife, Columbo, The Night Stalker, and McCloud.
Some questions are
answered
at the end, but some are not, and I for one like that some are not.
Frederick Knott wrote Dial as a play in the early fifties and the Hitchcock film version was released in 1954 BUT the entire plot (our old friend the 'perfect' murder) hinged on the fact that in those days only the upper and middle classes had telephones at all and those were in fixed locations and in this era of jack points and cell phones the idea of someone obliged to answer a telephone located on a desk in front of heavy drapes behind which a murderer was lurking ready to strike when the phone was
answered
would be ludicrous.
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