Tends
in sentence
592 examples of Tends in a sentence
When he speaks about animals, [he]
tends
to remove the fact that plants exist.
Though some would prefer to comment on the value of Bond movies in the connection of learning frequency, and while most of the jargon that
tends
to limit Bond to a meager 007 following has been exploited beyond all reasonable contention, there are several redeeming plausibilities that extend the credibility of Sean Connery in this doubling role that had seen its counterpart adaptation in part of a previous performance by Jessica Tandy in Driving Miss Daisy.
And what kind of an alcoholic
tends
to drink with the bottle held about 8 inches from his hungry mouth so that the contents generally spill all over his face?
At the beginning of the movie, he
tends
to neglect and overprotect her and this makes her weary.
Filmed in Connecticut, Predator Island is set on an island called with a lighthouse Hell's Beacon which is inhabited by only the couple who
tends
the lighthouse.
Comparing it to BBC Comedys like Only Fools and Horses, Fawlty Towers, Black Adder, and other classics, this series
tends
to drift away from the BBC's regular product to the audience and deliver to somewhat of a folk culture.
Alice Dodgson,a New York doctor gets her license suspended when she treats one of her patients with an unapproved drug,resulting in the patient's death.Without a job,Alice is forced to go to Jamaica,where she
tends
to the brother of a wealthy white landowner.The brother thinks he's a zombie and is deeply involved in the local people's voodoo practices and rituals."Ritual" is a mediocre horror flick.The action is pretty dull,the plot twists are silly and there is no suspense.There is a bit of gore as someone is killing off white people with a machete,but not too much.The cinematography is decent,however the acting is truly woeful.Definitely one to avoid.4 out of 10.
Garden State
tends
to be one of those movies.
Suffice to say that as the case
tends
to be with Korean cinema, the plot revolves around the relationship between the northern and southern parts of the peninsula.
After hearing it an estimated twenty times throughout the movie, starting right with the credits, it
tends
to loose some of its emotional impact, sorry to say.
A film that
tends
to get buried under prejudice and preconception - It's a remake!
Other times, he
tends
to host guests involved in the latest celebrity scandal which contributes absolutely no intelligent information to the country and feeds a largely uneducated public that wants to hear the latest gossip about movie and TV stars.
The show can be quite boring, when it comes to judging, Tyra
tends
to go on and on and it's really off-putting.
I have to say I had a bad feeling about the movie, as the publicity made around it was quite frightening, and as french humor
tends
to be quite populist and flat (forget about les bronzés 3 or camping...) but I was really surprised, and in the good way!
Greene is bearable, but obviously for the sake of the masses,
tends
to explain things in a slighty patronising way.
You can guess the rest, but while Reynolds
tends
to lose sight of the story at times he has a good eye for individual scenes and almost gets a performance out of Rachel ward as the high-class hooker he falls for.
Once Spanky and Buckwheat are in Marshall Valiant's home, Spanky
tends
to interact mainly with the adults and the chemistry of the children is essentially lost.
While the story
tends
to leap through time, occasionally leaving the audience perhaps a little hungry for missing detail, it still flows and avoids any real confusion.
His nurse Hana (Juliette Binoche)
tends
to him, body and mind, for she fears, quite rightly, that he may be a very troubled soul.
This kind of movie always
tends
to be fun, as long as it's done well.
As he
tends
to do, Chan-wook Park keeps you off center with leaps in time and plot and situation that you have to fill in for yourself forcing your involvement in the story and characters.
It
tends
to grow on you.
Eastwood
tends
to be great, sometimes excellent.
This is s superbly crafted top-notch Washington thriller directed by the talented Wolfgang Petersen with hotshot screenwriter Jeff Maguire (who seems to have done very little over the years, so maybe he
tends
his roses).
But it
tends
to focus more on what is at the core of skating.
This one, however,
tends
to drag a bit throughout, and some scenes (such as John Cusack and Natasha Richardson's love story) could have been eliminated entirely without causing the film to lose much.
Falon is an alcoholic, and that
tends
to sway him from being in self control, though he manages to direct his attention towards finding who's really behind his partners death.
Warning: Herzog is a filmaker, and as such
tends
to be a bit overly dramatic.
One film that
tends
to get somewhat lost under the Vertigo's and the Psycho's is this film; Strangers on a Train, the most compelling film that Hitchcock ever made.
Guess I can take some pride in not liking what "the general populace
" tends
to go for.
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