Tooth
in sentence
159 examples of Tooth in a sentence
Tooth
and Nail is a horror movie that is neither scary nor interesting.
First, when they are on their flight to New York, the pilot says that everyone on board will have to go to Boston (after much time consumed circling over the big city, due to weather conditions), they lose their luggage when they arrive at the Boston airport (and try to find it in a panic, while hurrying to catch a train), they hustle by cab over to one station to board a train, but Gwen has to go to the women's room, but can't find it due to hurrying to make the train (the one they board has no one on but a cleaning lady, and they miss the one they were looking for, which was next to the empty one), then they hustle to another station to get on board one and try to get something to eat on a car with almost no food, they arrive later on at a transit station in New York and discover that all of the transportation services are on strike, so they walk in the rain to their hotel, and Gwen breaks the heel on her shoe while walking before they arrive, only to discover that their room was given away to someone else after the 10 pm deadline, then they walk with a man who helps them find another room (only to rip them off by robbing them at gunpoint, taking George's wallet), then they try to go to the police station to report the guy who scammed them, then go the armory by the police, only to get their route foiled by some liquor store robbers, they get dumped in the park and mugged by a stranger at 4 am while sleeping under a tree (George's watch was taken while he was sleeping), then they find Cracker Jack on a bench for breakfast (that a dog steals almost immediately, which George breaks a
tooth
on, causing him to whistle on his spoken S's), they get chased by a cop on horseback for an assumed problem with a child in the park, and more funny situations to come.
The well-intentioned people that fought
tooth
and nail to produce the lackluster Civil War romance "The Last Confederate: The Story of Robert Adams," a.k.a.
Granted Dean was a little long in the
tooth
for this role but it wasn't as bad as say, Cannonball Run, where it was obvious he was only doing it for his own reasons.
By 1941, the boys - Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy - were getting "long in the
tooth"
and their films showed it.
He's getting a little long in the
tooth
now, but I still chuckle whenever I see him on his occasional visits to one of the late night T.V. shows.
watching this mess is like having a
tooth
pulled without Novocaine.
( black and white horrors ).If anyone can help me out it would be appreciated.I will pay money and costs of shipping or exchange for some items from Australia ie White pointers (Shark)
tooth
pendant.On vhs tape can be either ntsc or pal recordings.Just remember you can never replace the memories or scared feelings that these old hammer horrors gave us when we were young and impressionable.I gave this a 10 rating cos it was the first horror film i saw and the fond memories of how scared i was are still with me to this day 30 years later.
Particularly in the United States and Britain since the 1980’s, we have witnessed a return to the capitalism “red in
tooth
and claw” depicted by Karl Marx.
Bureaucrats are sure to fight them
tooth
and nail, and will have allies at the top levels of government.
Surrounded by hostile neighbors, such as Chinese, Mongols, and Manchus in the north and Japanese across the sea, Koreans have struggle
tooth
and nail for thousands of years to retain their ethnic, linguistic, cultural, and political identity.
With her “Baby
Tooth
Study,” the American physician Louise Reiss, who died earlier this year, proved in the 1960’s that radioactive fallout from nuclear testing had entered the food chain – and thus into human babies – all across the US.
As my colleagues at the University of California, San Francisco, have reported, the Sugar Research Foundation – the industry’s trade group – even sought to persuade clinical medicine to focus on saturated fat instead of sugar, and pushed clinical dentistry to focus on a vaccine for
tooth
decay rather than sugar reduction.
Many of us can see the appeal of the Old Testament principle of “an eye for an eye, a
tooth
for a tooth.”
Fifty years of defense dependence on the US has created a powerful “peace industry” in Europe whose primary business is to fight defense spending
tooth
and nail.
The fact that competition policy is the only
tooth
that bites in Brussels should not be an excuse for preserving a system that defies democracy and seriously lacks transparency.
For a long time, Merkel fought this new EU
tooth
and nail, because she knows how unpopular it is in Germany – and thus how politically dangerous it is to her electoral prospects.
He even seized the relic of the
tooth
of Buddha, a symbol of Sri Lankan political sovereignty.
Financial-market participants are fighting
tooth
and nail not to pay their fair share, putting forward a number of arguments against an FTT to camouflage their resistance.
Instead of believing in the
Tooth
Fairy, we should start investing in green R&D.
India's Mahatma Ghandi once said that an eye for an eye and a
tooth
for a
tooth
leaves the world blind and toothless.
And Shakespeare noted that
tooth
decay was a cause of awful pain and unpleasant odor.
Even in my own lifetime,
tooth
loss was commonplace.
Potential army recruits were turned away if they had
tooth
decay or missing teeth, because they would be unable to bite open a powder cartridge for a musket or use their teeth to remove a grenade’s safety clip; they would also struggle to eat properly.
Mahatma Gandhi criticized the biblical justification of retribution, “an eye for an eye, a
tooth
for a tooth.”
This fit the ideology of a brand of capitalism that was “red in
tooth
and claw.”
First, there is the old law of “an eye for an eye, a
tooth
for a tooth.”
After all, if a
tooth
aches, we turn not to a pleasant and well-meaning friend, but to the frightening syringes and drills of the most competent dentist we can find.
Israeli politics are notoriously red in
tooth
and claw.
At the same time, the organization has fought the Securities and Exchange Commission
tooth
and nail to block a rule that would allow shareholders to write in their own candidates when votes are solicited.
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