Losing
in sentence
1635 examples of Losing in a sentence
But for all those sad concessions to
losing
whatever Meyer might have made of this story, it's one of my favorites.
I don't recall the English
losing
a single ship, and the Spanish only a few-and though the fire ships will wreak havoc on the Armada, it will come about as they travel home-not as in the film in a giant conflagration.
This is a film that is slow in developing but not without
losing
its grip.
I could go on forever pondering why this pile of utter crud has made it onto TV but it's a sure sign that England is surely
losing
brain cells and humanity.
He chose his life as a soldier in the Foreign legion as an act of revenge to purge his anger from
losing
his family.
The plot (what there is of it, and be fair, not many reporter/gangster film from the 20's and 30's did either) moves Frazier from the clean black and white world of New York to its darker underbelly without once getting dirty or
losing
the starch on his Herbert Hoover collar.
It takes a while before you realize what exactly is going on, without this
losing
any of its gripping tension.
Where we follow a group of students who have an American Pie type of vibe to them, by busting out jokes and repeatedly have discussions about
losing
their virginity and performing other sexual acts.
Losing
a loved partner one has lived with for years can be a devastating thing to cope with, but not really knowing if he is dead or alive -- or worse, going into denial that he has died -- can lead a person right into the edge of the abyss.
From an Oedipus complex stricken young man to an eye specialist , beautiful lady that just lost a toddler to an older, underachieving mail clerk
losing
his eye sight we have the proponents of a could be good movie.
Of course, Goldie's Molly McGrath meets the obvious resentments from high school boys that you would expect finding out their new coach is a woman, but she does eventually win them over, even at the risk of
losing
custody of her two daughters to her uptight ex-husband (James Keach).
Lenzi has done excellent action thrillers and great gialli, but here, there's nothing worth
losing
90 minutes over.
After barely 10 minutes we were already falling asleep and
losing
all interest.
It's funny yet realistic and touching as the former major league player becomes the most unlikely coach of a
losing
baseball team.
one day after awakening form a nightmare in a mall she is confronted by a detective who asks her odd questions about her childhood and after
losing
him she finds that that strange things begin to manifest such as the mall turning into a rusty ugly place filled with demons and what not and after escaping she bumps into a crazy lady that claims that she has being looking for her for a long time.
Although not even a mediocre player would fall into this trap - much less a grandmaster, even when being annoyed - it really is a fitting position for the movie, for undoubtedly, any chess player who commits murder for fear of
losing
a chess match is a fool indeed!
As reflected in its subtitle, "Stoked" is not an original idea about a talented individual attaining success then
losing
it.
But the scenes that open the film of Heston hefting a cool-looking machine gun while decked out in Austin Powers-style finery (!) staring in angst at an old calendar or
losing
his mind for a moment hallucinating the sound of telephones ringing in the deserted city still pack a punch.
After
losing
his virginity to a pumpkin, Lola was definitely a step in the right direction.
The cast were all excellent, Lars Hanson was superb as the tormented title character Anson Campbell, he has been accused of over acting, but, Anson Campbell is a man who is
losing
his faith and heading for a mental breakdown to boot and Hanson portrays that with chilling clarity at times, though admittedly he was a little over wrought in some later sequences.
The gangster literally murders his way to the top, betraying Freddie in the process and
losing
his soul in his fierce quest for power.
Dolph Lundgren stars as Jason Price a NSA agent who after
losing
a witness in his protection agency investigates the leak and finds out that there's more then what meets the eye in this mediocre thriller which is definitely a nice looking feature but the plot is just too hard to follow making this for Dolph Lundgren fans who will ignore the plot and just enjoy the action.
The moment when he is confronted by a newcomer prisoner about to be guided to the gas chamber is the stuff of cinematic history in terms of acting: as Arquette tells his lies ("you'll be guided to the bath and soon will be reunited with your family", and so on), this scared newcomer, realizing his fate, confronts him and says "It's a lie, I can't believe it's Jews doing this job!I'm going to die, but I'm going to live longer than you ever will, you're dead already!!", the desperate prisoner shouts at Arquette, and then Arquette loses his head and attacks this man to death, breaking his skull with punches and kicks, not really moved by angriness, but by sorrow and pain to recognize the awfulness of the truth spit on his face - yes, even him, Arquette, can't believe he is doing this, and the outlet of such sorrow comes into the forms of him
losing
his head and degrading and smashing a fellow Jew's skull to the death.
Throughout the film, a cat and mouse game between Hayden and Sinatra unfolds resulting in Sinatra
losing
his cool.
First off, the fact that they never mention the cheap k-mart costumed creatures as trolls (The Friggin' title of the film!!) but as Goblins should already say they were
losing
the concept quickly.
Blood Dolls starts as eccentric billionaire computer developer businessman Virgil Travis (Jack Maturin) discovers he has lost a billion dollars after
losing
a legal battle leaving him financially ruined, obviously not best pleased about
losing
a billion dollars he sets out to kill his competitors who made it happen as well as the corrupt judge.
Is Neve Campbell
losing
money in casino or gambling to accept participating and exposing herself in such garbage?
A Perfect Murder is an update of the Hitchcock classic 'Dial M For Murder', and while the film doesn't touch Hitchcock's in terms of how thrilling it is, this update has been well handled and despite
losing
things such as the claustrophobia and the tight plot, A Perfect Murder still does what you'd expect it to do.
Throughout, we are rooting for her, even when she is obviously
losing
her way in a messed-up workaday world.
Last year I was worried that South Park might be
losing
it's edge, but last night's episode proved me wrong.
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