Gorillas
in sentence
37 examples of Gorillas in a sentence
Chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans also learn human sign language.
That's how comfortable these wild
gorillas
are with visitors.
They have more genetic relation to us than to
gorillas.
Many zoo
gorillas
have been given antipsychotics and antianxiety medications.
So if we think about this problem, the problem of creating something more intelligent than your own species, we might call this "the gorilla problem," because
gorillas'
ancestors did this a few million years ago, and now we can ask the gorillas: Was this a good idea?
Now, I know that's a dirty word for some people, but we evolved from common ancestors with the gorillas, the chimpanzee and also the bonobos.
And the ones that stayed on in Africa evolved into the gorillas, the chimpanzees and us.
These
gorillas
were murdered, some would even say crucified, and unsurprisingly, they sparked international outrage.
I guarantee that this movie will not make you think that there are killer
gorillas
anywhere on earth.
A bunch of folks with different agendas probe deep into darkest Africa, where they encounter a temple of riches just like in KING SOLOMON'S MINES -- but with cannibalistic
gorillas
guarding those riches.
Wait until you see the cannibalistic
gorillas.
There were some silly moments, like why did the killer
gorillas
decide to jump into the lava?
Killer
gorillas?
Talking
gorillas?
Please, I know the cover is interesting (what looks like a
gorillas
hands reaching for a woman's bare ass)but don't waste your time or money as you won't get either back.
Only he would (1) take footage from a 20-year-old movie about
gorillas
in diving helmets ("Robot Monster"), (2) combine it with clips from a 30-year-old movie about elephants with hair mats glued to their sides ("One Million B.C."), (3) throw in parts from a God-knows-how-old Filipino movie about midget cannibals, half man/half lobster monsters and beer-bellied Chinese cavemen with snakes growing out of their shoulders (all of the aforementioned footage being in black and white), (4) spend $11.43 shooting new "connecting" footage (in color, no less) with an apparently--to be charitable--confused John Carradine and a bunch of actors who have trouble remembering their lines (among them a vapid blonde who is so incompetent that all her dialogue is dubbed in by someone else and who doesn't even have the decency to make up for it by getting naked), (5) put it out under at least 10 different titles and (6) try to pass each one off as a new movie.
There is, in fact a "real" gorilla on the loose (played by Art Miles - the makeup, while not great, wasn't as bad as some that I've seen), who can't be the murderer (because first,
gorillas
can't write notes and, second, he hasn't been on the loose long enough to have committed the murders) but still he provides plenty of comic relief in his scenes with the Ritz Brothers.
The plot revolves around a man, his newlywed wife, and her strange connection with
gorillas.
It reminded of many Three Stooges films in which the boys wind up in some hotel or house or castle where guys are trying to scare them off with skeleton outfits, gorillas, etc.
Since there was so much comment on the "fake gorillas," I think it is worth pointing out that these were not in fact intended to be
gorillas
but rather the fictional race of "great apes" that raised Tarzan in the Burroughs novels.
Yor runs around, randomly fighting dinosaurs, gorillas, and dodging lasers that come from the middle of nowhere.
I'd prefer more of the "savage, but civilized" side of Tarzan to be portrayed, along with less chimp and fake
gorillas.
complete idiots who have jumped on the Michael Moore polemic bandwagon and managed to record with the help of camcorder guerrillas (or is that gorillas?) a mere eighty minutes of mostly this pair of muppets cutting their hair, touching their balls, and drinking coffee.
What was the fascination with
gorillas
in this time period.
For
gorillas
and orangutans, too, “who” is more common than “that.”
The Rights of Apes – and HumansMELBOURNE – On June 25, in a historic vote, the Spanish parliament’s Commission for the Environment, Agriculture, and Fisheries declared its support for The Great Ape Project, a proposal to grant rights to life, liberty, and protection from torture to our closest nonhuman relatives: chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans.
It is also a crisis of emerging infectious diseases (EID’s), such as HIV in humans, Ebola in humans and gorillas, West Nile virus and Avian Influenza in humans and birds, chytrid fungi in amphibians, and distemper in sea lions.
How might equity prices or bond yields be distorted by $200 billion
gorillas
that need to invest $4 billion per week?
Chimpanzees, bonobos, and
gorillas
have long-term relationships, not only between mothers and children, but also between unrelated apes.
Chimpanzees and bonobos are our closest relatives, and we humans, not
gorillas
or orangutans, are their closest relatives.
Related words
Chimpanzees
Orangutans
Bonobos
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