Bells
in sentence
163 examples of Bells in a sentence
My copy intersperses lots of
bells
and gongs and adds an eerie feeling when the village warning
bells
are rung.
It moves me and it takes me back to a time when things where simple and a good story could be told without the
bells
and whistles and still move you years after.
The FX are horrible, the acting is stale, and they play tubular
bells
800 times in this movie!
Recommended for a nice twin-bill:
BELLS
of SAN ANGELO(1947).
Well hell's bells, she's from Smyrna, Georgia.
When the British film magazine Sight & Sound had one of their periodic times of asking critics to list what they thought were the best films ever made, there was a book which collected articles by several of them, one of whom said that if you were the type of person who didn't tear up at THE
BELLS
OF ST.
For me at least, alarm
bells
immediately start ringing if I learn that a recent action or horror film has been shot in an Eastern European location.
Jason Roboards,Sr., (Wholesaler in Wines) gave a great supporting role along with John Emery, (Jean Cornudet) who comes to the aid of Elizabeth along with a Priest who will not ring the church
bells
of his Parish in defiance of the Prussian Generals.
Long periods of silence broken by the occasional creak of floorboards or chanting or bells, and very little dialogue.
The only sounds are those of human movement, work activities, church
bells
and chirps from the surrounding forest.
When British Prime Minister Theresa May says that she wants to “make a success of Brexit,” she sets off alarm
bells
in Brussels and other European capitals, because such an outcome could inspire populist anti-EU movements elsewhere.
Indeed, Trump already set off alarm
bells
during the campaign with careless remarks about trying to renegotiate US debt by buying it back from creditors at a discount.
Very few among them (notable exceptions including Nouriel Roubini and Robert Shiller) raised alarm
bells
about the crisis to come.
But the passing from the national stage of Richard Lugar has properly rung new alarm
bells
not only among concerned Americans, but also among policymakers far removed from the US and its partisan battles.
That should have set off alarms
bells
in India, given China’s claims on large swathes of Indian sovereign territory, but there is no sign yet that anyone has noticed.
Churches will ring
bells
350 times, 350 cyclists will circle towns, and, in many places, 350 trees will be planted.
The alarm
bells
should be ringing loud and clear across Asia – an export-led region that cannot afford to ignore repeated shocks to its two largest sources of external demand.
In the same report, the IMF rang alarm
bells
over potential equity bubbles, pointing out that “stock prices are currently above trend levels in most countries, with signs of stretched valuations in a few countries (Chile, Colombia, and Peru).”
The Syrian Game ChangerWASHINGTON, DC – Reports that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government may be preparing chemical weapons for deployment, presumably against its citizens or neighbors, have triggered alarm
bells
worldwide, and thrust Syria’s civil war into a new, more dangerous phase.
But it should also sound some familiar warning
bells.
(Indeed, with alarm
bells
sounding throughout the region, the United States’ “pivot to Asia,” widely derided for its clumsy rollout and unintended consequences, now seems wise and prudent.)
The fundamental problems that triggered alarm
bells
in the first place – including real-estate bubbles, local-government debt, rapid growth in shadow-banking activity, and rising corporate leverage ratios – remain unresolved.
Otherwise, they can expect alarm
bells
to begin ringing again – and, next time, they may not have the tools they need to silence them.
These new worries are raising alarm
bells
in China.
But “natural resources” and “Africa” is a combination that usually triggers alarm bells, and Central Africa is no exception.
An outfit called the Global Trade Alert (GTA) has been at the forefront, raising alarm
bells
about what it calls “a protectionist juggernaut.”
So, barely two months into the second Bush administration, alarm
bells
about the China threat seem to be ringing again.
Carols, church bells, and mangers are still at the heart of mid-winter festivities, alongside the consumer binge.
The warning
bells
are ringing: like the Turkish lira, the India rupee has lost over 5% of its value in the last month.
And savvy Bank presidents have known that the best way to deflect political pressure is to add yet more
bells
and whistles – especially when they are visible and loud.
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