Convenience
in sentence
208 examples of Convenience in a sentence
I remember this distinctly because it came up a lot." "Right after he told me and my brother he was going to be separating from my mom, I remember walking to a
convenience
store and getting a cherry cola."
Like even people in
convenience
stores saying, "Have a nice day," when they're accidentally looking me in the eye.
The end scenes were special effects driven
convenience
and how the villain of the story planned his whole scheme.. who was he (or she) trying to kid, talk about naive.
"Love Life" explores a very culturally relevant scenario of a marriage of
convenience
between a lesbian and a gay man.
Okay, here's one major problem: Sandra Bullock's character is abducted by Jeff Bridges in his car at a busy
convenience
store in broad daylight.
I was expecting much but what I got was some interesting scenes (I really liked the first seen at the
convenience
store), some amusing stories as told by the characters and a little bit of action thrown in the mix as well.
We are taken to a
convenience
store where Nick is looking at coins in his hand figuring if he can get the special, a 69 cents 20 ounce cup of coffee that comes with a free pastry.
By that time I was worn out by the preposterous confused plot that deals with a dead lover, marriage of
convenience
and a nutty ex-lover.
This movie plays on
convenience
about every five minutes.
The film suffers from an abrupt and unexpected ending which afterwards feels wholly inadequate, with the
convenience
familiar from ending your school creative writing exercise with 'and then I woke up'.
She wants to be a swimmer and forces herself on Floriane ( a Renascence quality beauty per one reviewer) and she is also a friend of
convenience
to Anna: not unattractive, but for her, the time of her body's perfection was short, and now she is an adolescent in a women's body.
This movie has a very simple yet clever premise - an unemployed man trying to steal from a
convenience
store, and the store clerk catches him in the act... the thief runs away with the store-clerk right after him.
Along the chase for the thief, they catch the eye of the Yakuza who's been looking for the
convenience
store clerk.
The only true love of her life, her brother, has been sent to prison for beheading some poor
convenience
store attendant, and she's angry about that.
The film is about a guy who works in a
convenience
store.
The plot is difficult to explain as its just about two guys in a
convenience
store and one weird day, the script is sharp with plenty of humour but clearly has something to say no matter how muddled.
"The Flying Car" is a lukewarm redux of the infamous "Uncle Walter" scene from Smith's debut film "Clerks" (1994)--the one that takes place as Dante and Randall, a pair of 20-something
convenience
store employees, drive to the wake of Julie Dwyer, one of Dante's old flames, and get into some...unique...conversation en route.
The reason the 7 is lost is because he used history to his
convenience
and imagination.
In need of a place to hide out after inflicting a fatal beating and unnecessarily tormenting a
convenience
store clerk, they make themselves at home as the depressed girl, Lisa holds her own by offing the guys one by one with many axes that always seem to be in reach.
It's filmed in Harlem, and there's no shortage of
convenience
stores, sleazy law officers, and uptown projects.
Take Kevin Smith's cult flick Clerks, change the
convenience
store to a billiard shop, and make the leading ladies really hot, and you'll end up with Kisses and Caroms.
Shot in black & white and filmed in and around a New Jersey
convenience
store, "Clerks." is genius on celluloid despite little change of scenery, wooden acting (none of the actors are professionals), and a shoe-string budget; it's also pretty damn funny.
The film features Dante (Brian O'Halloran) and Randal (Jeff Anderson), two bored New Jersey
convenience
store employees who are both called in on a Saturday (Dante is especially upset because it's his day off) and the two break every rule in the book as they meander through the day and encounter all sorts of colorful characters.
Throughout the day, Dante complains about about his girlfriend Veronica's (Marilyn Ghigliotti) sex life, Randal shirks his
convenience
store duties by shooting the breeze with Dante, philosophize about their daily predicaments, play hockey on the roof of the store, and observe unruly and bizarre shoppers.
Time travel bits are used as a
convenience
for a slightly different take on a romantic drama.
It begins with a group of criminals in suits and ties who beat what appears to be an associate of there's to death and then go out and terrorize a female clerk at a
convenience
store.
This show is utter garbage and should stick to youtube or something where its lame demographic of pathetic 30-45 year losers can watch this on their own
convenience
and not make other viewers suffer slogging through this waste of space.
Having just killed two men, and tortured a
convenience
store assistant, three thugs (two thoroughly sadistic bastards and one 'nice' guy) decide to lie low, taking refuge at a deserted farmhouse, home to pretty young teenager Lisa and her paralysed war veteran grandfather.
While the two girls have vague plans of getting an apartment together, they seem content to while away their summer hanging out and indulging in their shared infatuation with Josh (Brad Renfro), a friend from school who works at a
convenience
store and doesn't seem to be especially attracted to either of them.
I thought the "mullet man" in the
convenience
store was hilarious.
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