Tobacco
in sentence
410 examples of Tobacco in a sentence
We decided to clone all the five human genes responsible for making type I collagen in humans into a transgenic
tobacco
plant.
The farmers receive small plantlets of
tobacco.
It looks exactly like regular tobacco, except that they have five human genes.
And then they got sued by big tobacco, who claimed that collecting information with pencils and clipboards is neither precise nor provable.
The
tobacco
lobby, it's too strong.
In the US, these devices come under the FDA's jurisdiction as a
tobacco
product.
Teens who use
tobacco
products are more likely to use marijuana and alcohol and also develop depression and anxiety as a teen or as an adult.
Down below, there was her grandson plowing the
tobacco
field with a mule.
But then Bayamanacao turned on Deminan, blowing
tobacco
spittle from his nose onto Deminan’s back.
Then she doses the patient with cihuapatli to help expel the baby, massages her in the sweathouse, and rubs her stomach with
tobacco.
Did big
tobacco "
sponsor" the film?
I can't still get over the little girl saying "Mom said
tobacco
will rot your teeth."
Then I didn't like that she smoked aggressively one cigarette after the other but perhaps the film was supported partly by the
tobacco
industry.
The Indian weaponry comes at the audience non-stop throughout, and a spray of
tobacco
juice aimed at a rattler is thrown in for good measure.
Also memorable from this movie are scenes of Lloyd spitting
tobacco
juice and waiting for his truck to start.
This agreeable French movie deals about a millionaire owner of a
tobacco
factory on an African island nearly to Madagascar named Louis(Jean Paul Belmondo).
We have seen several more movies of this sort being made in the recent years, the most memorable of which was 'The Insider' where Russell Crowe played a
tobacco
industry scientist who tried to blow the whistle claiming that the Industry added more nicotine in cigarettes to make smokers addicted.
I mean, the Tracys were college graduates and some of them did even drank alcohol and smoked
tobacco!
I was expecting a documentary that focused on the
tobacco
industry in North Carolina.
Instead I watched a man who rues the fact that his great grandfather lost his
tobacco
empire to the Duke family.
I grew up near the area where Mr. McElwee's family began it
tobacco
business ; I expected more than McEwee's continual focus on his family.
I learned very little about the history of
tobacco
in the NC economy and the ramifications to the state's economy by tighter regulation of
tobacco.
Does the viewer gain any understanding of the role of
tobacco
in the North Carolina economy by the showing of old film clips of a fictionalized film?
The author sets out on a "journey of discovery" of his "roots" in the southern
tobacco
industry because he believes that the (completely and deservedly forgotten) movie "Bright Leaf" is about an ancestor of his.
Set in the south on an Alabama
tobacco
plantation the story combines elements of family life, psychology and persistence.
Perhaps a little more bathroom humor, a huge helping of added gratuitous violence, a female slapping all the men around, some thinly-veiled pejorative references to drug and
tobacco
companies, considerable sexual depravity and a homosexual hero would have elevated Buckaroo Banzai to the level of a neo-classic, a la Pulp Fiction.
It looks like a promotion for the
tobacco
industry.
"The Insider" is a masterpiece.I only saw it because Al Pacino was in it;the theme really wasn't very interesting for me(I though that was the usual "political-correct" film against tobacco),but then came the big (big!) surprise;I found myself seeing an incredible good film.It has wonderful performances by(of course)Al Pacino ,Russel Crow,Christopher Plummer and Diane Venora.It's one of that strange cases when the theme of the film isn't very interesting , but the film is so well made that you enjoy it like if it would have the most interesting theme possible.Michael Mann shows that is one of the best directors;making an absolutely absorbing film ,starting with a non much interesting theme ;it has nearly hypnotic moments (the most of them when Al Pacino and Russel Crow are having a phone conversation).It's so absorbing that the 2 hours and a half of it seems like lees than 1 hour.I can't say what's the best thing the film has,why?;because it's all;the performances, the dialogues,the locations (with incredible shadows and lights in everyone),the direction,etc.So, if you want to see one of the best films (if not the best )of 1999,see this masterpiece.
The movie is loosely based on a true event covered by Frontline about a
tobacco
scientist titled " The Man who knew too much".
In his quest to reveal to the world about the tricks the
tobacco
giants are employing to increase the sales of cigarettes , he is haunted and tormented to the extent of even losing his family for a just cause he believed in .
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