Habit
in sentence
547 examples of Habit in a sentence
Having never found her footing once she became a superstar, Stone made it an unfortunate '90's
habit
of churning out bigger-budgeted versions of the early flops in her career--the kinds of movies which went straight to tape.
I'm a big sci-fi fan who has a bad
habit
of sitting through just about any sci-fi movie once.
The Plot A troubled teen has the
habit
of sucking his thumb.
His orthodontist puts him under hypnosis and he soon gets rid of the
habit.
Disney's truly bad side is their
habit
of churning out cheaply made straight-to-video sequels and spin-offs.
It's my old
habit
that whenever I post some comment I like to discuss the main characters character.
Mississippi Burning is a very professionally handled film and credit for that has to go to the director, who has a
habit
of putting together very professionally made films.
ANIMALYMPICS is definitely one of those films that pretty much defines its time and place - it's got a soft-rock score by 10CC's Graham Gouldman, some shiny chrome-effect logos and bumpers (the titles that pop up at the start of each segment), references to late seventies pop culture including disco fever and surf bums, and it's pre-political correctness so there are plenty of stereotypes (if you're offended by the joke early on about all Asian people looking the same, represented by a herd of puffins, you'd better tune out or get a sense of humour) and, believe it or not, a lot of none-too-thinly-veiled sexuality from our anthropomorphic heroes - the animators do have a
habit
of going slightly over the top with any movement that involves breasts or rear ends!
The settings were beautiful, but every internal scene seemed to have been filmed in semi-darkness.At least the actors didn't fall into that awful American
habit
of inserting what sounds like 'full stop' every 3 or 3 words, but dialogue was still slurred and on occasions difficult to discern.
Speaking is a bad
habit
for little old Tori.
(Oh, did I forget to mention that those Mescaleros have a nasty
habit
of tying their prisoners to ant hills?) "Escape" boasts a very tough-talking script, with glints of humor coming from the bickerings between (those great character actors) Williams Demarest and Campbell, and its final third is remarkably suspenseful, as Roper, Carla and the escaped rebs are laid siege in a ditch, while the Mescaleros pick them off with rifle shot and lob volleys of arrows into their midst.
The movie has a
habit
of straying then coming back on the topic on hand and then straying again.
It seems that Chevy was minding his own business, when he is kidnapped to rob a bank by two ex-cons, who make a
habit
of getting trusting faces to do their work for them.
But financial markets have a disconcerting habit: predictions viewed by investors as completely obvious often turn out to be wrong.
But French citizens have an ingrained
habit
of demanding that government solve every problem, no matter how trivial and this is costly too.
Bill Clinton, elected in 1992 against George Bush (whom Clinton accused of being solely interested in foreign policy) is tending more and more to become personally involved in foreign affairs, a
habit
of all second term US presidents, with one eye cast on the history books.
I (and many others) have the annoying
habit
of replying to vague messages with a clarifying question, kicking the can down the road.
Italians are in the
habit
of thinking that tax increases necessarily go only to paying off rich investors, rather than to paying for government services like better roads and schools.
Not only did he arrive almost three hours late to the onsen summit, in keeping with his
habit
of leaving foreign leaders waiting; he also declined a Japanese government gift – a male companion for his native Japanese Akita dog, which Japan gave him in 2012.
Yet China knows that it is time to break that dangerous
habit.
Smaller countries spend more, as a percentage of GDP, on education and health care – another
habit
that new small countries would do well to uphold.
Abandoning the
habit
involves not only the inconvenience of losing perks and a certain lifestyle, but also the loss of power.
In every case, voters said, “no” – outcomes that can be blamed, particularly in the UK, on national leaders’
habit
of blaming the EU for domestic problems.
Trump’s
habit
of tweeting at all hours on all manner of subjects, has those in Washington, DC, including Republicans, on edge.
(Foreign observers, too, should abandon the
habit
of focusing all of their attention on the person at the top.)
It is time for Europe’s leaders to break the decades-old
habit
of pursuing half-baked projects that blunt the symptoms of crises, and to implement real reforms that address the root causes.
Here on the Upper West Side, in the middle of a triangle formed by Central Park, Lincoln Center, and the Hudson River, I was once in the
habit
of beginning each day with an exotic act of devotion, a ritual of humility.
France is simply applying to EU rules its engrained
habit
of viewing its own culture as exceptional.
The fast-food industry makes it cheap and easy to eat out – a difficult
habit
to break.
Nepotism as a means of security is readily seen in the successful revolutionary's
habit
of appointing a brother or cousin to run the army: Fidel Castro did so in Cuba, Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, Hafez Assad in Syria, and Saddam Hussein in Iraq.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Would
About
There
People
Could
Before
Other
Without
Little
Never
After
Himself
Always
Great
Going
While
Having
Force