Veteran
in sentence
379 examples of Veteran in a sentence
Just like Jamal's dad, John McCain was a veteran, and just like Jamal's dad protected him, Jamal believed that John McCain would protect the entire country.
Moses, an officer, Ranger, veteran, was very clear about his water rescue mission: Bring relief of free, clean water to the people in Flint.
I have some bad news: Your
veteran
records might have been destroyed in a fire in 1973.
If you're a
veteran
and you're applying for your health benefits using a paper form, you might have to wait months for that form to be processed.
If a combat
veteran
returns home and is diving for cover when he or she hears a car backfiring or can't leave their own home because of intense anxiety, then the responses to those cues, those memories, have become what we would refer to as maladaptive.
If you're a
veteran
coming back from Iraq or Vietnam you face a blizzard of paperwork to get your benefits; if you're trying to get a small business loan, you face a blizzard of paperwork.
Neither am I a
veteran
social worker.
I'll show you one photo here, and it's a photo by Eugene Richards of an Iraq War
veteran
from an extraordinary piece of work, which has never been published, called War Is Personal.
And after a couple of weeks of going back and forth with Darrell, I learned he was a 31-year-old military
veteran
who had been injured and was really angry about not being able to go to Afghanistan to kill Muslims.
Your cousin, a homeless veteran; your grandma or grandpa who live in a house with a kitchen that's no longer accessible to them; your wheelchair-bound sister in a suburban area planned without sidewalks.
There is no insurgents without permanent help of USA The
veteran
of war: "Traditions.
He made extra-double-sure that we've got nothing but sympathy for the recently orphaned, Iraq war
veteran
Ty Hackett (Stomp the Yard's Columbus Short), who's about to have his house taken away by an evil bank (brother, I've been there).
Veteran
British television director Alan Gibson's "Dracula A.D. 1972" qualifies as one of the least appetizing entries in the Hammer Studios series about Bram Stoker's immortal bloodsucker.
The
veteran
Khaled Sami was funny in a badly written role as the grand father, which he is clearly got miscasted, for he looks younger than the actor who plays his son.
Ghost Story has an interesting feminist revenge tale premise, A-list
veteran
actors, colorful flashbacks with nifty look-a-like youthful counterparts of the old men.
The acting of even the
veteran
actors (particularly Stella Stevens) left a lot to be desired also.
My basic question is, being the experienced troopers of comedy that Moe and Larry were, why did they insist on attempting to continue the act when it was so obvious that their home studio, Columbia, was so clearly not interested in giving them serious writers and
veteran
comedy directors?
As a
veteran
of the original Tolkien craze, forty years ago, I'd hoped for more than the obvious--which doesn't always equate to the true.
Academy Awarding actor Sidney Poitier of "Lilies of the Field" reprises his role as Lieutenant Virgil Tibbs from the 1967 Oscar winning Best Picture "In the Heat of the Night" for
veteran
director Gordon Douglas' tired, uninspired sequel "They Call Me MISTER Tibbs," with nobody the equivalent of Rod Steiger with which to swap dialogue.
Particularly the
veteran
actor George Sanders ("Village of the Damned", "Psychomania") is one of the best players ever to appear in a Franco production.
It features horrible acting, a dumb plot, stupid events, a lot of other things you can expect from a bad monster-movie and also
veteran
actor Ray Milland, who does his best to mumble his way through this film while not having much of a clue about what he's doing in it.
Both are regularly crowded out of the frame by Chic Sale, only 47 then but playing an octogenarian Civil War veteran, ponderously jumping and "amusingly" nipping at Prohibition hooch and moralizing about how we're Americans, dag nabbit.
As a combat
veteran
I have seen violence, blood and gore, in many forms, and movies like We were soldiers is about as violent as a movie can get, but it has redeeming value.
As a
veteran
of the Iraq war I feel it necessary to say that the story, plot, acting and depiction of what soldiers go through upon returning home was pure garbage.
No, dude, I'm serious!" Then there are the slumming professionals: the most fun is Lydie Denier, the stunning French model and
veteran
of "Red Shoe Diaries," "Baywatch," "Melrose Place," and of playing many, many other variations on the sexy French bombshell; here she plays a psychopathic killer as if she were in BAISEZ-MOI or an "Alias" episode and not some direct-to-cable trash like this.
There's also the tall, dark and handsome Daniel McVicar, now a regular on "The Bold and the Beautiful," John O'Leary, who has played a dignified old man in dozens of movies and sitcom episodes and does it again here, and Aharon Ipale, the
veteran
Arab character actor perhaps best known as "Pharaoh Seti" from THE MUMMY and THE MUMMY RETURNS.
The only one who did and was believable was the
veteran
and he probably committed suicide just to get out of the movie as soon as he could.
And she certainly do not look like the female warrior who could easily kick some
veteran
warrior kings butt, but she does.
A
veteran
supporting cast including Fred Clark, Harry Morgan, and Eva Gabor lend excellent support.
The villains are pretty poor, Louis Jordon fails to make an impact as Kamal Khan and Bollywood
veteran
Kabir Bedi is equally poor as his henchman.
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