Remark
in sentence
289 examples of Remark in a sentence
It was not something you'd even
remark
upon.
But there's something that's been disturbing me since he made that
remark
just a short time ago.
And hold onto your seats, because if we zoom in on those faces,
remark
how they have the same broad forehead, the horizontal eyebrows, the long nose, the curved lips and the small, well-developed chin.
As it turns out, Khrushchev's
remark
was translated a bit too literally.
And I resemble that
remark.
And "remarkable" is a really cool word, because we think it just means "neat," but it also means "worth making a
remark
about."
So let me conclude with just a
remark
to bring it back to the theme of choices.
So, we need to write new stories, stories that, 300 years in the future, people will be able to look back upon and
remark
how they inspired us to new heights and to new shores, how they showed us new paths and new possibilities, and how they shaped our world for the better.
At a time when a sarcastic
remark
could constitute treason, this language was unprecedented.
Asked later in the Canadian documentary, "The Corporation," what I meant by the "go to jail" remark, I offered that theft is a crime.
When my first novel written in English came out in America, I heard an interesting
remark
from a literary critic.
Yet the assumptions that quantum theory needs to make in order to deliver those predictions are so mysterious that even Feynman himself was moved to remark, "If you think you understand quantum theory, you don't understand quantum theory."
But it's worth recalling Wittgenstein's
remark
on the subject: "Tell me," he asked a friend, "why do people always say it was natural for man to assume that the Sun went 'round the Earth, rather than that the Earth was rotating?"
From Fluke Starbucker waving around a flashlight instead of a lightsaber (I did that when I was young!) to Chewchilla the Wookie Monster, to Auggie Ben Doggie's "nah, just a little headache" remark, this film short is as much a part of the phenomenon as any of the actual Star Wars films.
Aunt Cora had always been tactless, and her well-bred family ignored the
remark
she made after her brother Richard's funeral: "He WAS murdered, wasn't he?".
In an early scene, Luca (David Pasquesi) and James (Jeff Garlin) are walking down a neighborhood street in Chicago, admiring the bucolic architecture, when a woman, angrily arguing in French on a cell phone, passes by them, prompting James to remark, "There's nothing hotter than an angry French woman."
(It should be noted that this episode also functions as a distant but pointedly critical
remark
on the rise of Fascism in Italy.)
My
remark
is that there are some very important scenes deleted in the story and presented in the DVD.
The only
remark
is that they should have maybe shown a bit more deeply the connection between his inspiration and his abuse of alcohol and women.
Although Robert Young (playing an easy-going, methodical and very likable cop) and Robert Mitchum (who actually does have the occasional throwaway witty remark) are the nominal stars of the film, it's Oscar nominees Robert Ryan and Gloria Grahame - as well as Paul Kelly, in the small but pivotal role of Grahame's pathetic husband - who give the film's most memorable characterizations; Ryan proved so convincing as a homicidal racist that he was eventually typecast for a while, excelling in equally villainous roles in such films as ACT OF VIOLENCE (1948), CAUGHT (1948), THE RACKET (1951), CLASH BY NIGHT (1952), THE NAKED SPUR (1953) and BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK (1955).
Its big attraction was that it brought back the original Bond, Sean Connery; its title reputedly derived from Connery's
remark
after "Diamonds Are Forever" that he would never again play the role.
Remember this is the man who made a
remark
about the genitalia of the naked corpse of Gram Parsons as he was preparing to set it alight.
When Omar Epps says " I need to be with my people", that racist
remark
spoke volume.
Someone here made the
remark
that maybe it's the frequency of the light waves or something rather than it being ugliness.
By my "Kool-Aid drinkers" remark, I mean that these are such devoted fans of the man Pavarotti that they make no attempt to objectively rate this film.
I can't help but agree with one character's closing remark: "(It was) A nightmare...from the past!"
There is a
remark
that one of heroines was raped on "drunken rampage" by Russian soldiers, which is completely untrue.
In the end I will only
remark
that a horror film is supposed to have something scary in it.
I believe that the same
remark
could suit to McDonald-Eddy's pictures.
As the one-line summary says, two movies have left such a
remark
on me when I walked out of the theater.
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