Brunette
in sentence
50 examples of Brunette in a sentence
Madonna was still a
brunette.
An expedition party made up of constantly bickering and obnoxious jerks go trekking into the dangerous African jungle in search of both a fortune in diamonds and a missing young lady named Diana (luscious
brunette
looker Katja Biernet, clad solely in a skimpy loincloth that shows off a lot of her hot shapely body) who's worshiped as a goddess by a deadly primitive tribe called the Mabutos.
Starting off by the characters physical appearances...like Channing Tantums lack of tattoos n Amanda Seyfried not being a
brunette
lol but i let that go...the character developments were not there at all...you didn't have time to love amanda seyfried character and you couldn't feel for her or for john when they first separated...i thought the two weeks were rushed and i hated that she left first then him...it took the emotional separation away...and why did they change Tim from the book...why did they make him a dad instead of a brother and why did they make him sooo old looking and the movie lacked that intense moment when they find out what happens at the end (didnt want to spoil it lol but for those who watched it u know what i mean) and whhhyyyy ooooo wwhyyyy did they change the ending...in the book it was heartbreaking and emotional and it emphasized on Channing Tatums character's decision whhyyy did they twist it...it just made it look like a rushed ending...it was terrible...thats what disappointed me the most...the ending of the book should have been exactly the same :(
The only redeeming feature of this film is the pretty dark-haired woman... well, the blond girl was pretty too, but she was annoying and not as good looking as the
brunette.
I remember one of the early scenes when Bogard meets this pretty
brunette
in an apartment she is showing him.
Racing enthusiast Fabian (as Tommy Callahan) smokes, drinks, and suffers blackouts while juggling feelings for alluring
brunette
Annette Funicello (as Francie Madsen) and blonde mainstay Diane McBain (as Annie Blaine).
Please, somebody direct a movie where this English
brunette
is on-screen all the time!
Just look at the characters from the two families, Connors (Roseanne) and Harts (Reba) ; the blonde bombshell elder daughter (Becky Connor and Cheyenne Hart) who's married to a moron (Mark Healy and Van Montgomery), the sarcastic
brunette
younger daughter (Darlene Connor and Kyra Hart), the little brother (DJ Connor and Jake Hart), and the quirky relative (Jackie Connor and Barbara-Jean Booker Hart).
Turning down his partner
brunette
bombshell (Crystal Mantecon) in the film's first 5 minutes made me want to eject it right there.
Four lovely young nurses in their last year of nursing school experience all kinds of turmoil and excitement in their lives: sweet Susan (winsome
brunette
Elaine Giftos) tries to comfort the bitter, terminally ill Greg (a moving performance by Darrell Larson), eager, but neurotic Phred (lovely blonde Karen Carlson) romances handsome gynecologist Jim Caspar (affable Lawrence Casey), free-spirited hippie Priscilla (the stunningly gorgeous Barbara Leigh) gets impregnated by laid-back drug dealer Les (the solid Richard Rust), and compassionate Lynn (nicely played by Brioni Farrell) helps out angry Mexican revolutionary Victor Charlie (the excellent Reni Santoni).
Ingrid Bergman is at her most radiant in this movie as a
brunette.
Pretty
brunette
Rachel Carter pops her top and bares her cute little breasts.
Blythe Metz, the
brunette
femme fatale who portrays the sexier, homicidal side of Jacqueline, is a real knockout.
Special kudos are in order for foxy
brunette
actress Paola D'Egidio, whose lusty and uninhibited portrayal of depraved and lascivious wicked bitch Rhonda positively burns up the screen.
Coleman's eager to cut some tracks with the smokin' R&B outfit the Group (none other than Earth, Wind & Fire in their awesomely funky prime), but his rigidly commercial greedhead label A-Chord Records run by uptight, mob-connected middle-of-the-road square Jerry (a properly unhip Ed Nelson) wants him to record a hit single for the hideously insipid Carpenters-like pop pap trio the Pages, an allegedly squeaky clean bunch which includes smarmy pedophile step-dad Franklin (a perfectly vile Bert Parks), bitchy, neurotic daughter Velour (a fine, flighty turn by perky, comely
brunette
Cynthia Bostwick), and hedonistic smack addict son Gary (former 50's juvenile sitcom staple Jimmy Boyd).
The Hoff excels here as Gary, a cynical and skeptical photographer who along with his repressed virginal writer girlfriend Leslie (attractive
brunette
Leslie Cummings) investigates a seedy dilapidated haunted hotel located on a remote island off the coast of Massachussetts.
Jay Kirby (as Rusty) is a handsome young hero; and, Mary Beth Hughes (as the blonde June) and Gladys Blake (as the
brunette
Betty) are pretty women.
There are other things, including a chained wild man in a cave who is never explained, an attempt to sacrifice the writer in some way (will they kill her or brainwash her into joining them?), the witches themselves, a bunch of
brunette
women in white robes who don't show up until the last 15 minutes of the film and whose practices and beliefs are never explained.
This movie features a gorgeous
brunette
named Danielle Petty.
A British park ranger living in Los Angeles (Collin Firth) marries a pretty, demure
brunette
woman (Lisa Zane) whom he met in a park only a short time ago.
They could have at least gotten a
brunette
for Daisy.
Better still, both yummy blonde Marisol Santacruz and lovely
brunette
Adriana Vega supply some tasty eye candy by wearing skimpy bathing suits.
A blonde and a
brunette
are in a dark room.
And the
brunette
actress has a single body, has one breast slightly bigger.
A blonde little girl (Kitty) and a
brunette
one (Evelyn).
Worse yet, poor George is further saddled with a newborn baby sun and a lascivious lesbian teenage daughter (dishy
brunette
Sheri Jackson).
A year after losing gorgeous Jane Parker (Maureen O'Sullivan) to love rival Tarzan, hunter Harry Holt (Neil Hamilton) returns to the jungle to have another bash at winning the
brunette
babe's heart.
Bored and unhappy young babe Zandalee (a winningly sultry and vibrant performance by luscious
brunette
knockout Erika Anderson) feels trapped in a stale and loveless marriage to failed poet and decent, yet dull businessman Thierry Martin (a solid and credible portrayal by Judge Reinhold).
She alternately appears blonde and
brunette
for adult audiences (note, no nudity), and tries not to shoot up.
The cast is essentially the same...two girls (one
brunette
and one blonde) and two boys (one
brunette
and one blonde) are substituted for the "original" two girls and two boys with the same hair color and the same general appearance.
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