Here in Britain the issue of illegal immigration used to be like the elephant in the room that everyone pretended not to notice. |
|
Besides getting money out of me would be like getting blood out of turnip, it isn't gonna happen so don't even try to sue me. |
|
It was natural, of course, that a man who had stood, holding his conductor's baton on the greatest cities of the world would be like this. |
|
It would be like imagining that ancient Mediterraneans thought and behaved like middle class Americans. |
|
Travelling the information highway can be an exhilarating journey, but for many it can also be like flying blind. |
|
It reminds me of what it'd be like if one of our probes ever landed on a planet with sentient life. |
|
Here's comfort for septuagenarians feeling OK now but wondering what they'll be like in ten years time. |
|
He concluded by saying that we couldn't even begin to comprehend what one day in his shoes would be like. |
|
To say it has been a whirlwind for the 26-year-old would be like saying Franz Ferdinand's year was, well, fair to middling. |
|
On a sunny February afternoon this was no problem, but come August it will be like an oven. |
|
I was quite amused at the formality and mildly curious at what the experience would be like. |
|
So I consider a boycott and two seconds later I realise it'd be like taking a pair of shears to my nose. |
|
What would life be like without all the anxieties and pitfalls of big decisions? |
|
I can't imagine what it would be like to have every minute detail of my life become grist for public criticism and scrutiny. |
|
Fourteen-year-old Sandra longs to be more than thin and flat-chested, desiring to be like her friend, Jennifer, voluptuous and big-breasted. |
|
Two short years was enough to take me from imagining what it must be like to be that person, to actually being that person! |
|
I suppose they could be like triffids and just automatically move towards noise, or a particular smell. |
|
When you pray, don't be like those show-offs who love to stand up and pray in the meeting places and on the street corners. |
|
Should he lose, it will be like a pack of wolves that suddenly turns on itself. |
|
I have a pretty good idea what it will be like, since I have tried low carb muffins, chocolate cake, crisps, chocolate and breakfast snacks. |
|
|
You big boys seem to be like the muley cows in Oklahoma, who do not like to hook horns because muley cows by definition don't have horns. |
|
It would be like trying to hear a distant skylark's song standing beside the M1 during the rush hour. |
|
It is easily light enough for a handheld supertelephoto lens, but what would the bokeh be like? |
|
If we compare our own limitations to the infinite which is unlimited, our limitations are so small and inconsequential as to be like nothing. |
|
He'd be going off his 'nana. He wouldn't stand for it. He'd be like a raving lunatic. |
|
The 28-year-old sales assistant said she thought that introducing a law would be like creating a nanny state. |
|
His mind was still wandering from thinking about what being a dad is going to be like, the dirty nappies, baby sick the works. |
|
These days enable both parents and children to get a feel of what a school might be like. |
|
They can be like naughty children, up to mischief one minute, bickering the next. |
|
Some men think it's a soft job and they are too butch to do it, but it doesn't have to be like that. |
|
Your kids are like my own nieces and nephews and Devon has gotten to be like a brother. |
|
What would the relations between the generations be like if there never came a point at which a son surpassed his father in strength or vigor? |
|
In time this will be ground into the path and form a solid long lasting surface, but currently it can be like cycling through sand. |
|
He imagined it would be like lying with a dead woman, so spiritless was her expression. |
|
Don't be like Halle Berry, burying herself in film projects and vowing never to marry again. |
|
Having a weak team represent the league would be like sending a burro to race against thoroughbreds. |
|
It is time the rest of society reclaimed its right to have a voice in determining what their lives shall be like. |
|
They might be like fat people you see in elevators, the spotty people at the beach, the sour people in parking lots. |
|
It's going to be like a high school basketball game that is decided by the final shot at the buzzer. |
|
And she set an example that, you know, she was supposed to be like Caesar's wife, beyond reproach. |
|
|
It was this kid with dirty blonde hair in what seemed to be like the hairstyle of a mop. |
|
However that can't apply because Latin didn't have some of the letters that lead to the numeration involved so the sums can't be like that. |
|
If this was the pinnacle of what the the tour can offer, what can the lower reaches be like? |
|
Monty appears to have changed, but what will he be like after seven years in the can? |
|
He was then dropped into various oldie clubs and less wrinkly locations to give him an insight in what it would be like to be old. |
|
If you haven't worked out exactly what this film will be like by now, there's no hope for you. |
|
There seems to be a few set in stone, undeniable, eternal truths as to what the future will be like. |
|
This would be like prosecuting the publisher of The Washington Post for an op-ed article. |
|
Then they hear some remark, casual or otherwise, and the player ruins his or her style trying to be like somebody else. |
|
As a one-time heavy smoker, I know what it will be like for you not being able to smoke when and where you want to. |
|
It would be like a mate in the pub telling you he'd have bought you a pint had you been here 30 seconds ago! |
|
So we wrote these songs to say, hey, it's cool to be different, and don't be like the squares! |
|
The recent examples of Fujimori in Peru and Menem in Argentina, in particular, demonstrate that civilians too can be like caudillos. |
|
He is one of the most sought-after artists in the world and in terms of price it would be like asking how long is a piece of string? |
|
To test the ludicrousness of that line of thinking, imagine what it would be like if we were all God-fearing celibates. |
|
Propertius' romantic, impossible dream had been that Cynthia would be like heroines of myth. |
|
When we got to the top we would both talk about how life would be like when we were in junior high. |
|
He says that as the level of hacker sophistication goes up, the level of difficulty will be like the difference between checkers and chess. |
|
But there is something romantic about it all, as if maybe life could be like a Hollywood musical after all. |
|
It almost seemed to be like the homespun cloth her shoulder sash was made from. |
|
|
But I sometimes wonder what it would be like to just be a normal guest, rather than someone who sings for their supper. |
|
What you've done needed doing, but I'm thinking it's likely to be like kicking a hornets' nest when word of it gets out. |
|
Pistol once again brings attention to the seamy side of war, in his declaration that in France they will be like horseleeches, sucking blood. |
|
Everyone has his or her own idea of what a classic hot hatch should be like. |
|
He's a little hot-tempered, but you have to be like that to do what you want to do. |
|
It would be like a citizen's arrest, except instead of arresting them, I would just fire them. |
|
I want to be like her and paint a big peace sign on the side of a school or something. |
|
Why couldn't it be like the good old days where I thought boys were icky and all that jazz? |
|
Many of us perhaps have little idea what it must be like to be in the depths of despair. |
|
It would be like counting up the least visible bits of a perceptible object. |
|
They never wanted to be like the couples who coddled their pets like children. |
|
I can't help but wonder what the house I'll always call home will be like on Christmas Day. |
|
I would sometimes image what it would be like to go fishing with my father, or be cooking dinner with my mother. |
|
I imagine it must be like a game of Mousetrap in there, all cogs and levers, ball bearings and little plastic men diving into baths. |
|
I didn't really expect it to be like the movies, but I had the same hopeful aspirations every college-bound senior has. |
|
In England, elements of the style turned up, but coloured by entirely different ideas about what a house and a community should be like. |
|
Part of me wishes that I could be like some of the loftier commentators and get all morally indignant about this. |
|
Even so, the country has begun to ponder what it will be like without an outspoken, feisty prime minister. |
|
People think they know what it must be like at the club and think we all must be really down in the dumps but we're not. |
|
After all, that would be like forcing the baseball, tennis and track teams to all practice within one field house at the same time. |
|
|
Folk transcriptions of Chinese by English speakers tend to be like Pinyin in this respect. |
|
Eat it and you'll be like that man who drank his finger bowl in front of Queen Victoria. |
|
Some politicians, declaring themselves to be servants of the people, have pledged that they would be like faithful dogs. |
|
It shall be like one of those period dramas, with guests conversing politely in the drawing room whilst Kate plonks away in the next room. |
|
Well, basically, it will be like the flame-thrower and the hand grenade being used all at once. |
|
She couldn't help but wonder that if he was that attractive and poised just walking around, then what could he be like in bed? |
|
To dwell on the dearth of bonus material any further would be like rubbing poison oak into a paper cut. |
|
Royalty must be like this too, in the irresistibility of its appeal, the tragedy of its legacy. |
|
Those joyful and fleeting moments in the streets give us a brief glimpse of what our worlds could be like. |
|
You can fantasize to your heart's content, but you'll probably never really know what it'd be like if you and Dream Boy got together. |
|
What would life be like if I could not taste the vanilla ice cream in a root beer float? |
|
That's what my parents try to have our family be like, and God help them if they try to make me wear a poodle skirt and bobby socks. |
|
He was so certain of his charms that he couldn't begin to imagine what it might be like not to have them. |
|
But the post-industrial core's economy as a whole will continue to be like an airplane with only one working engine. |
|
What must it be like to be a CSO in a company whose senior management is up to their eyeballs in fraud and cover-ups? |
|
September and October are the best months to sample the new wine, giving a foretaste of what the following year's vintage will be like. |
|
I try to be humble in my martial arts, but in my movie career I can not be like that or I will get lost in the crowd. |
|
If it wasn't for friction between the tyres and the road, driving a car would be like trying to drive on an ice rink. |
|
And I am consumed by curiosity and a desire to know what on earth this cool thing is going to be like. |
|
I had a closer look at these guys and the white appears to be like fuzzy hairs. |
|
|
Hitler made it very clear that war in the East was to be like no other war fought by Germany. |
|
Doctor Who without daleks would be like Morecambe without Wise or Wimbledon without strawberries. |
|
I really had no preconceived ideas about what the experience would be like. |
|
The idea was that a language should be described without any preconceptions of what it might turn out to be like. |
|
It will be like a spiritual spring clean, and nothing of darkness or evil will dwell in there again. |
|
If this reader wants to be like Ink, she can begin by writing some short opinion pieces in a daybook. |
|
He has drawn misleading analogies about how the mind might be like a computer or a general-purpose learning device. |
|
I enjoyed writing the ghost story and the competition gave me a real taste of what it would be like to be an author. |
|
The relationship between IT and the rest of the business needs to be like a marriage with a good deal of mutual give and take. |
|
Spring lambs are the flavour of the week and are turning out to be like gold dust. |
|
Lawton is sure to impress the crowds with his new material, and if his last tour is anything to go by, tickets will be like gold dust. |
|
The anticipation is quite unlike anything that has gone before and tickets for the final will be like gold dust. |
|
It would be like talking at length about the desolateness of the Scottish Highlands without mentioning the Highland Clearances. |
|
If you're suddenly editing a newspaper, it's probably not at all what you thought it was going to be like when you were a writer. |
|
They were so nice, and then they'd move in to kiss me and I'd be like, eew, eek. |
|
The soul is 10,000 times more effulgent than the sun, but the covering of ignorance is so strong that we appear to be like dead matter. |
|
It can only ever be like that because that's how Brazilians are with football. |
|
We should not be like a mob descending on the village and leave like locusts. |
|
Finding the key to making this foam would be like discovering a new planet. |
|
When it comes to physical abnormality, the camera can be like an innocent, mercilessly truthful child. |
|
|
Can you imagine what your average bar or pub would be like if men had a time of the month? |
|
Whatever the God implied by evolutionary theory and the data of natural history may be like, He is not the Protestant God of waste not, want not. |
|
Listening to this in the middle of the night is what I'd imagine having a particularly strange trip on acid would be like. |
|
The end result will be like something you have seen in way-out fashion magazines. |
|
Having a weak team represent the league would be like sending a donkey to race against thoroughbreds. |
|
I thought it would be like a piece of my jigsaw puzzle missing, to not see Rajan again much. |
|
It would be like putting on an act to get others to advance toward God, when I'm still getting a toe on the starting line. |
|
When I landed a job at the STAR newspaper I thought it would be like journalism in the movies. |
|
A serious drama should be like a swimmer diving into a pool and swimming to the other side in one smooth, perfect trajectory. |
|
Teachers also have expressed their ideas concerning what well-adjusted and successful students should be like. |
|
I try hard to put myself in that position and imagine what it would be like, but of course, I've always been part of the majority. |
|
You know, no matter how hard I wish for it, life will never be like an adventure game. |
|
Still, she did not want to humiliate her friend and, once it was over, she rather hoped it would never be like that again. |
|
I want to be like that bloke who doesn't have a phone, and if you want to reach him, you have to fax his mother. |
|
The way things go in the first hour or so of the day is usually indicative of what the day will be like on the whole. |
|
The drug agency suggested that implants might be like cars or tires, which wear out with age. |
|
But it winds me up because everything we have seen today does not have to be like that. |
|
I couldn't contemplate going under the knife to erase my wrinkles, it would be like wiping out a part of my past. |
|
I knew what it would be like being a solicitor as I did work experience with a legal practice in Dundee. |
|
One might expect that Marx would go on to explain in some detail what communism would be like. |
|
|
It could be like chocolate cake that you've never tasted and then suddenly, wow! |
|
Without them Cumbria would be like the North East during the devastating unemployment of the early nineties. |
|
Information security is going to be like a game of musical chairs for security vendors. |
|
Thus, Labour chiefs believe Osborne will be like a lamb to the slaughter for Brown. |
|
Alternately, imagine what it would be like to be confronted by a set of concepts whose application was internally inconsistent. |
|
With a treasure hunt planned, it will be like reliving the excitement again for kids. |
|
They had a yurt, which is a tent, and the guide wondered, out loud, what it would be like to live in such a thing. |
|
Nor can they have any idea of what it must be like to live permanently in an atmosphere of fear and violent repression. |
|
If you are running a trading operation, you have to be like Caesar's wife, beyond reproach. |
|
Not that I'm not very familiar with a hedgehog's anatomy but it's what I imagine the back third of a hedgehog would be like. |
|
Anyway, that's what it must be like to review a film critical of your boss for the newspaper your boss owns and operates. |
|
I'd asked for the sirloin to be well done, but didn't expect it to be like leather. |
|
Claudia and Alex are totally different from me and at first I thought I was expected to be like them. |
|
As I sit looking at their photos, I cannot imagine what it must be like for their family. |
|
As a mother and grandmother myself, I cannot imagine what it must be like for them. |
|
Those of you who wonder what it must be like to live with a writer, wonder no more. |
|
I cannot imagine what it must be like to see your best friend die in front of you. |
|
We knew what to expect, what the atmosphere would be like and the pressure we would face. |
|
Many novelists and philosophers have considered what it would be like to be able to see into the future. |
|
You have to ease your way in, rather than be like a bull in a china shop, which isn't my style anyway. |
|
|
I don't think councillors will vote for this with an election looming, it would be like turkeys voting for Christmas. |
|
It is my belief for fishermen to accept this would be like turkeys voting for Christmas. |
|
I was astonished that she'd found any boy to marry, thinking anyone so foolish would be like her, a flawed appendage to a decent family. |
|
They're purposefully designed to keep us in line by giving us a glimpse of what life would be like if schools didn't exist. |
|
Pushing these children back into mainstream education where they have already failed would be like throwing them into the lion's den. |
|
It is an interesting site and gives you a look at what the Roman roads through Cumbria used to be like. |
|
Well, it's very pale and it should be like a real liver, dark red colour, you see. |
|
Marketers could use positive Arien traits, for example, to promote a product to those consumers who aspire to be like Ariens. |
|
For me, reporting for duty on a strike day would be like joining the army and then refusing to go to war. |
|
The drawback is that for a sophisticated task, this can be like programming an operating system in assembler. |
|
Just imagine what the world would be like if every one of us made a conscious effort to genuinely love one another? |
|
I guess the fish will never be like the old days when catches of bream and tailor numbered into the hundreds. |
|
Other times it can be like sitting in a hornets' nest with sand fleas up your nose. |
|
Some parts seem to be like bird or avian viruses, while other bits are similar to bovine or murine viruses. |
|
I can only imagine what it must be like to be one of a team that makes it all the way in any walk of life. |
|
It would be like a Taswegian wondering why a Melbournian would need to go north in winter. |
|
Whenever I read this Psalm of David, which is quite often, it reminds me what it would be like to backslide, and I pray that that never happens. |
|
I thought it would be like an awards ceremony like the Bafta's but it was nothing like that. |
|
For clarification, Teresa was explaining to the class that they were going to be like marionettes hanging by the strings. |
|
Any other way of living would be like having a ball and chain tied to your ankle. |
|
|
Student loans will be like a ball and chain around the ankles of graduates, affecting their life choice for decades. |
|
I have NO idea what Thursday's Fence will be like, because I banged that thing out without heed for the usual rules of coherence. |
|
You could, of course, write a thesis about Wodehouse but the endeavour would be like trying to preserve thistledown between sheet glass. |
|
Of course, getting money out of two characters like these brothers would be like getting blood out of a turnip. |
|
Perhaps it would be like a person's usual voice being taken over by a telling voice, sitting round a campfire intoning long poems thousands of years ago. |
|
It would be like making a decision about whether or not to keep exercising at mile 24 of a marathon. |
|
It would be like winning a kiss from an ogress who called herself fair. |
|
As bad as the jostles were for him at the craft's bow, Mateo could only imagine what it must be like for the passengers in the sternmost sections. |
|
I walked sadly to my locker, trying to convince myself that it was bound to be like this and that he had pashed my friend anyway, so he wasn't worth my time. |
|
I thought this might actually be like going to an ultraconservative version of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. |
|
But my love of Spider-Man and my pure, unadulterated curiosity of what that experience was going to be like overwhelmed that. |
|
The only fair means by which we can tell what a Lib Dem government would be like is to look at how they behave when they do get to exercise power. |
|
What 15 months in a federal correction institution will be like, according to a man who counsels to-be inmates. |
|
I sometimes catch myself wondering what the world will be like after I am dead and trying to tell myself that it will not matter because I will be insensible to it. |
|
And who will hazard a guess as to what the Ireland of 2020 will be like? |
|
Due to a lack of custom software tools to analyze the blockchain, tracing a chain of transactions can be like following a set of muddy footprints in the rain. |
|
I was imagining yesterday what it would be like if those tanks were at San Francisco airport, motoring up Highway 101 into San Francisco, lobbing shells along the way. |
|
Which would be like the NHL eschewing videotape and listening only to the offending player in a disciplinary process. |
|
Whereupon the wonderful God acted wonderfully, insomuch that Judas was so changed in speech and in face to be like Jesus that we believed him to be Jesus. |
|
It would almost be like smokers 50 years ago trying to get tobacco companies to pay to put filters on all cigarettes, just in case the products turned out to be dangerous. |
|
|
With a bit of luck it will be like shooting fish in a barrel. |
|
In terms Wall Streeters can understand, it would be like your Porsche getting a flat tire. |
|
Now multiply their problems tenfold and one gets the idea of what a national health care system would be like in the United States with a population of 300 million people. |
|
He loves the pleasures of old Paris and could be content to be like any other Euro idler, but events beckon his conscience to undertake a mission in counterespionage. |
|
That would be like asking Dante to traverse his Inferno again. |
|
He began to imagine what this future would be like, when everybody lived inside a virtual universe. |
|
Like George Bailey in It's a Wonderful Life, the fretful marionettes pondered what life would be like without Sarkozy. |
|
People are unexcited about what they imagine heaven could be like. |
|
Oh the government could of course make all the ungreen things really expensive by taxes, but that would be like annoying for the little people like us. |
|
Depending on which band you are listening to, pan music can be raucous and noisy, a riotous volley of plinks, clangs and bongs, or it can be like notes on velvet. |
|
Viewed from the front bench, discipline is said to be like herding cats. |
|
Who'd want to be like a man when they can be lovely pretty girls? |
|
What are their living conditions going to be like after we bomb them out? |
|
Allow your mind to wonder what life would be like if this relentless, multidimensional Morse code was our primary method of information consumption. |
|
Lew agreed, but the box remained unopened in the bottom drawer of his desk for several weeks until one day he wondered what it would be like to smoke one. |
|
Looking around her minimalist apartment she tried to imagine what it would be like living with children, tried to visualise playpens, teddies, and discarded Duplo. |
|
Sam chewed contemplatively on her spoonful of lukewarm bean-and-asparagus stew, imagining what it would be like to be a graduated member of the League. |
|
Some of them seem to be like our typical male models who while sashaying down the ramp in fashion shows give a demonstration of their well-built bodies. |
|
If it did smash into the Earth the effect would be like detonating thousands of nuclear bombs, killing billions of people and wiping out an area the size of Europe. |
|
It could be like trying to thread a needle on a bucking bronco. |
|
|
But, I'm afraid it will be like when little kids tattle on each other. |
|
My mom expects me to be like her, but I'm not trying to be a brainiac. |
|
But asking Murial Cooper to deliver an ugly and ordinary book design would be like forcing Mies van der Rohe to put a mansard roof on the Seagram Building. |
|
Fast forward to this weekend, when I post-coitally fell asleep in my still-boyfriend's bed, wondering what it would be like to kiss his roommate's full and beautiful lips. |
|
But I felt pressure in myself, just because I idolized Kristen Wiig and I just wanted to be like her. |
|
All the mariachi player wanted to do was to be like his father, his grandfather, and his great grandfather before him, but fate did not unfold as he had hoped. |
|
It's funny how life can oftentimes be like a pestilent 15-year-old. |
|
Truly, I wanted to be blown away and feel like this guy would be like Robert Downey Jr. was in Iron Man. |
|
Taking away his bonus, in short, would be like denying an gambler a seat at the card table. |
|
The kids today are like pussycats compared with what we used to be like. |
|
You'd think it would be like saying farewell to an old friend. |
|
The new constitution, instead of being the panacea for every grievance so delusively represented by its advocates will be found upon examination to be like Pandora's box. |
|
People circled around the pagodas with the wish to be like Buddha himself. |
|
If you don't know what's going on it must be like watching paint dry. |
|
A few people are going to be like Kobe but most people will be on the end of the bench not making much. |
|
The problem with places like Johnson Creek and Smiley Creek is that you'll seldom be alone there, and on a nice summer weekend, it can be like a fly-in. |
|
So, giving enough money to councils without dealing with the inherent inertia of management and rampant laziness would be like pouring grain in a bag full of holes. |
|
I tilted my head back, sighing, wondering again how I had come to be like this, one of the many young well-born and well-dowered hostages in court. |
|
She imagined what it would be like when it was finally orbiting in space. |
|
For it to work properly it had to be like Caesar's wife, above suspicion. |
|
|
That's when having a business is a bind, but it needn't be like that! |
|
If Groupon was Battletoads, it would be like I made it all the way to the terra Tubes without dying on my first ever play through. |
|
A sketchbook can also be like a diary, in the sense that it is a keepsake of memories, interests and observations from this time in a student's life. |
|
Extractions can be like that, and I don't get bent out of shape over it. |
|
I could imagine what it would be like to have that dog bolling his way down the mall hallway, sniffing people's rears and grabbing bags out of unsuspecting hands. |
|
The first one would be like a first draft of a Progressive Democrat conference keynote speech, and the second is like a homily from a stern and admonishing bishop. |
|
We didn't know what it was going to be like when we started, but as we got into it, more and more people, all the emails I get now instead of hi Peter, it's ahoy! |
|
It will be like aiming a gun when the intent is not to pull the trigger. |
|
Kaiserwerth was a new type of hospital operated by Lutheran deaconesses and was reported to be like no other hospital in all of Europe or the United States. |
|
The company asked students at Central St Martins College of Art and Design in London to design what they thought the wine bottle would be like in another 150 years. |
|
When we step into that cylinder of dry air and certain doom, all we can think is what it will be like when it crashes. |
|
A regime of yours, would be like, no doubt, being ruled by pimpled teens. |
|
Accompanying this diagnosis was a description of what her particular death would be like. |
|
You will be like some Gnostic visitor, someone who fell to earth to awaken those who have fallen asleep and have forgotten the wisdom that would make human life effective. |
|
Over a cup of tea, and a damper and corned beef sandwich people swapped stories about Les and what life used to be like in that beautiful part of the Territory. |
|
But after a point, blogging without writing gets to be like the electronic equivalent of street miming, and we all know how lame and annoying street mimes can get. |
|
We're wondering what it would be like to be born as a mini-me? |
|
Wonder what it will be like to have a few of those Yanks here with us. |
|
But throughout his battle to live, 12-year-old Dylan Foley never stopped wondering aloud what his first day back to school would be like. |
|
As Warren Buffett suggests, it would be like detonating a nuclear bomb. |
|
|
The absimilation of this man from himself, that he might be like the Son of God. |
|
Dining should be fun. Eating should be fun. It should be like a kid going to Chuck E. Cheese for the first time. |
|
You can't play it down, be all nicey-nicey and pretend it's going to be like a testimonial. |
|
It would be like asking you to read out my screenplay to Complete Works. |
|
I don't think we'll ever commoditize health care to the point that it'll be like buying cars. |
|
Saturn, its outer planet cousin, can however, when in tricky aspects or planetary angles, be like a giant brake. |
|
I DIDN'T think it would be like this, doing burpees at the top of a hill I'd just had to sprint up. |
|
When we plan, we can do extrapolative planning in incremental mode, where we project the present and assume that the future will be like present. |
|
When we've been playing for an hour or so, it can be like a head trip, like getting drunk where everything becomes lovely and vague. |
|
Ivy was born without wings, but longs to be like the other faeries in her Delve. |
|
The spoof news item was read by a newsreader during a discussion on what Britain would be like if it was run by tabloid newspaper editors. |
|
For a photographer, shooting twins at the annual Twins Days Festival in Twinsburg, Ohio, must be like shooting fish in a barrel. |
|
The spoof news item was read out by a newsreader during a discussion on what Britain would be like if it was run by tabloid newspaper editors. |
|
Taking the money from the safe will be like taking candy from a baby, since I know the combination. |
|
To me, if I weren't going with someone and was taking pills, it would be like advertising that I'm an easy make. |
|
To say they were hot, tired, dirty, odorsome, and in pain would be like saying that boars had bad breath...a large understatement. |
|
I got talking to an old boy in the pub, and he told me what the village used to be like in the old days. |
|
It was in Toronto on 5 August that the team got its first taste of what life would be like on the road with Beckham on the roster. |
|
It'll be like snowdropping clothes from a clothesline. We'll snowdrop a baby. |
|
He shall be like tamaric in the desert, and he shall not see when good shall come. |
|
|
This is gonna be like bleedin' a steer. Turn around, mister, or I'll stick this Texas toothpick in your eyes, one at a time. |
|
You can also use GoldMine in a single-user version, but that would be like killing a fly with an elephant gun. |
|
In-jokes about celebrity culture and what these stars might really be like pours gasoline onto every spark. |
|
In the cycle training, we learnt the rules of the road and what it would be like to be on the road when we are older. |
|
People from across the Midlands are set to learn what it would be like to sleep rough on a cold winter's night at The Big Sleep Out. |
|
The stars move on the sky only about one milliarcsecond a year, which would be like watching a golf ball on the Moon moving one foot per month. |
|
He said the monster aspired to be like the anti-heroes he read in books, such as the Marquis de Sade. |
|
We were always the underdogs and it's going to be like that for us in this qualifying campaign. |
|
But this may be like the hydra, where something new can grow in its place. |
|
To be engulfed by you into an identification must be like being nibbled at, ticklingly, by a void. |
|
It would be like if after the 40th pipe in Flappy Bird was a scarecrow. |
|
The feeling of jaildom deepened around them. Neither had ever seen the inside of a prison, but each felt that this surely was what a prison must be like. |
|
Cuber security should be like traffic rules and traffic police. |
|
And if they tried those truth drugs on me they'd be no good, more drugs the merrier for me, put on a bit of Floyd and it'll be like an afternoon sesh at mine. |
|
Meanwhile the Vanitas restaurant is designed to be like a classical Italian palace, with handmade wall decorations featuring the Grottesche Italiane. |
|
But what will she be like interviewing real honest-to-God celebs? |
|
The analysis shows, there are a number of possible factors of the rationalization and understanding of the practices on what the enlargement has been and should be like. |
|
How would life be like if one were to remain stateless in perpetuity? |
|
Normative economics seeks to identify what economies ought to be like. |
|
One such example is my own family where I motivate my children to aspire to a role model and put in all the hard work and determination to be like that person. |
|