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58 Sentences With "faintest idea"

How to use faintest idea in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "faintest idea" and check conjugation/comparative form for "faintest idea". Mastering all the usages of "faintest idea" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And if we don't have the faintest idea what the future stream is going to look like, we don't have the faintest idea what it's worth.
We haven't got the faintest idea what years we'll-- be up or down.
I don't think they had the faintest idea just how dangerous he was.
"I haven't the faintest idea how this happened," the erstwhile UK envoy said.
Even Olaf knows it: "You haven't the faintest idea," he says in the trailer.
So I--- but-- I haven't got the faintest idea on-- BECKY QUICK: All right.
Of course, I've never pretended to have the faintest idea of the company's strategy here.
They were all homemakers and children who had only the faintest idea about what was happening outside.
The roof needed to be replaced, and she didn't have the faintest idea how to get it fixed.
Centuries later, younger Asgardians like Thor seem to have only the faintest idea of their land's ugly past.
Donald Trump may be an expert at tweeting, but he hasn't the faintest idea how to shake someone's hand.
McKinnon thinks she must have felt a mixture of confidence and fear, but really she hasn't the faintest idea.
" Asked who would, in fact, pitch on Wednesday for the Mets, Collins said, "I haven't the faintest idea just yet.
"If somebody is saying that I agreed to that, they don't have the faintest idea what they're talking about," Hoyer said.
She said she hadn't the faintest idea (my mother was just about the only person not getting high in the 1970s).
"Basically nobody has the faintest idea what will happen," said Charles Grant, director of the Center for European Reform, a research institute.
"I did enjoy texting this random stranger even though I did not have the faintest idea who they were," Ms. Dewey said.
And I don't have the faintest idea what our businesses will be doing six months from now or 100 months from now.
I haven't the faintest idea how Elon Musk will turn out, but he has a considerable chance of success and considerable chance of failure.
We- if we buy something, we don't have the faintest idea whether it's gonna go up next week or next month or the next minute.
The Trump administration may not have the faintest idea that the mobile ecosystems of today owe so much to liberalization of the old telecoms regime.
Even today, energy IT is in early development — we have only the faintest idea where it might go or what new capabilities it might unlock.
Buffett: Well, I don't have the faintest idea what the stock market's going to do tomorrow or next week or next month or even next year.
Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a war to die or be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what's going on.
"The bottom line is that nobody has the faintest idea yet what the Brexit effect will be," Tony Travers, a veteran urban policy expert, told me.
"We were so excited to meet Martha Stewart, but she didn't have the faintest idea who we are, not a single clue," Chip jokingly told the outlet.
He strikes me as more of a gratuitous vaper of mango-flavored juice than someone who would have the faintest idea what to do with a dab.
Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a war to die or to be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what's going on.
"I was little and I didn't have the faintest idea that I was serving time together with my parents," she told the Russian magazine Sport Express in 19603.
Neither Ruby nor Jack had ever used an encrypted messaging service before, and had only the faintest idea of what the "dark web" is and how it works.
Through the four episodes (of eight) available for review, viewers who haven't read Mr. Gaiman's book will have only the faintest idea of where the plot is headed.
So even though the researchers were able to generate the skin in multiple mice, scientists still don't have "the faintest idea how to control or manipulate" it, he says.
The dogs don't have the faintest idea of what they're supposed to be doing there, unless, by coincidence, the winning dog happens to be the one left holding the toy.
No release date has been announced for the new Flight of the Navigator, so we haven't the faintest idea when, or if, we can expect to see it in theaters.
Yet no one has the faintest idea what the Earth's rotation period would be if it had not been whacked hard enough to form the Moon in the first place.
As you may have noticed lately, the temperature outdoors currently registers somewhere between oppressive desert heat and swamp-like humidity, making even the faintest idea of getting dressed a laughable fantasy.
After watching all three of these movies and reading half the first book, I still haven't the faintest idea what Christian Grey actually does, besides stare out of skyscraper windows looking troubled.
I mean, it-- in the day or the week-- but-- shouldn't-- I don't have the faintest idea how to buy and sell stocks for a day, or a week, or a month.
Twenty years later, that ritual strikes me as almost innocuous — how much power do we give to the scribbled signature of a teenager who had only the faintest idea what sex was?
"I found myself at her cunt, which is exactly where I wanted to be, but I then realized with terror that I had not the faintest idea what to do next," she says.
"Friends, I have a doctorate in this business, but I don't have the faintest idea about what's going on," Maurício Santoro, a prominent political scientist in Rio de Janeiro, said in a Facebook post.
These requirements have the weight of prophecy and doom, but they're also faintly amusing, as though the elves lost their car keys centuries ago, and don't have the faintest idea where to look for them.
"I haven't the faintest idea," Manager Terry Collins said with a laugh when asked before the game if he had a gut feeling about what his roster would look like when the trip ends Aug. 3.
Collins admitted in Tuesday's post-game that he hadn't the "faintest idea" of who would pitch in the series finale, although Milone or Gsellman are the most likely candidates according to multiple New York-area beat writers.
In the past three years, evidence has emerged that Facebook was a primary vector for sowing political discord in the United States and, so far, Zuckerberg hasn't demonstrated that his company has the faintest idea of how to stop it.
Maybe people have only the faintest idea of the fatality risks of any given job, and maybe the labor market isn't tight enough that they actually have a choice of jobs and just take the first one that becomes available.
You know, in my view, with a very high probability you know what is going to happen 10 and 20 years from now in a major way, and I don't have the faintest idea what is going to happen tomorrow or next week.
" He continued: "We would be willfully removing ourselves from a single market of 500 million people without the faintest idea whether, or on what terms, we would be allowed to continue trading with 27 E.U. states who would want to punish us.
A robust media campaign seems to have succeeded in asserting that the Cavs were not in good enough shape to habitually run fast breaks and didn't have the faintest idea of what their roles were in the compiling of a disreputable 21985-218 record under Blatt.
I know of no one > in the younger generation who has the faintest idea what the Depression was. > They think it was a hard time and so forth. It was murderous. For awhile I > lived outside the city.
Mark Jenkins of National Public Radio stated that it featured "subtle performances by its striking stars" and served as a parable about border issues. AMC's Chris Cabin criticized the movie, arguing that its director "seems not to have the faintest idea of how to properly approach the subject", because the film is, in Cabin's view, "unabashedly pro-Palestine".
The Mercury Theatre on the Air subsequently became famous for its notorious 1938 radio adaptation of H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds, which had put much of the country in a panic. By all accounts, Welles was shocked by the panic that ensued. According to Houseman, "he hadn't the faintest idea what the effect would be". CBS was inundated with calls; newspaper switchboards were jammed.
After leaving the Air Force, Rowland continued to live in Canberra, consulting part-time for French arms concern Ofema. In late 1980 he was recommended by the government of Premier Neville Wran to serve as the next Governor of New South Wales, replacing Sir Roden Cutler. Rowland admitted that he did not have "the faintest idea" why he was chosen, and thought that "there must be a lot of people who could do it a lot better than I could". He saw the role as the monarch's representative in New South Wales as helping to provide "a valuable link with an older part of the world".
Grant wanted to avoid provoking any major battles until the linkup with Buell's Army of the Ohio was complete. Thus the Union army had sent out no scouts or regular patrols and did not have any vedettes in place for early warning, concerned that scouts and patrols might provoke a major battle before the Army of the Ohio finished crossing the river. Grant telegraphed a message to Halleck on the night of April 5, "I have scarcely the faintest idea of an attack (general one) being made upon us, but will be prepared should such a thing take place." Grant's declaration proved to be overstated.
Captain Paul Pihl, an aircraft procurement officer on Horne's staff, blamed many of the Navy's wartime supply failures on Horne's hands-off management style and lack of logistics expertise. "It was his job", Pihl said after the war, "and he didn't have the faintest idea what the hell he was going to do with it. Horne had had no previous experience with logistics, and he tended to go by the old Navy tradition that you didn't get involved in what was happening in the engine room unless something went wrong, and then you brought a person up and bawled him out for it."Buell, p. 384.
On 15 February, Random Hand announced on Facebook that they would be going on indefinite hiatus to allow them to spend time with their families. They ended this stage in their careers with a tour and PledgeMusic Campaign to release their final album Hit Reset, which was made available to download for donators on 13 September 2015. They ended their live career in spectacular fashion with their sell out final gig at the Camden Underworld supported by friends in Faintest Idea, River Jumpers and Sonic Boom Six, the latter whom provided a lot of support to Random Hand in their early days. In October 2017, after a two year break, Random Hand announced their return in 2018 with appearances at Mighty Sounds Festival in Prague and OutCider Festival and Manchester Punk Festival in the UK.
Nurse Lt. Kellye Yamato is continually frustrated by Hawkeye's attitude towards her - he is happy to talk to her or dance the Lindy in the Officer's Club, but as soon as a tall blonde nurse approaches, or a slow dance tune comes on the jukebox, he acts "like I'm Typhoid Mary". Kellye then gives Hawkeye the cold shoulder, but Hawkeye fails to see what he has done wrong, and the two subsequently argue, Kellye telling him "you haven’t the faintest idea how terrific I am". Tensions are already high among the nurses as a visiting colonel has arrived to perform a snap inspection on Major Houlihan, her nurses and their routines. During a nightshift in post-op, Hawkeye sees the error of his ways as he observes Kellye comforting a dying soldier.
Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a > war to die or to be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what's > going on.Hanoi Hannah, 16 June 1967 Few if any desertions are thought to have happened because of her propaganda workThe Search for Hanoi Hannah, by Don North and the soldiers "hooted at her scare tactics". They were sometimes impressed, however, when she mentioned the correct location of their unit (when they would "give a toast to her and throw beer cans at the radio"), named US casualties and welcomed Navy ships into port with their correct arrival details and crew members' names. There were exaggerated legends of her omniscience, with rumors that she would give clues about everything from specific future North Vietnamese attacks to soldiers' girlfriends cheating on them at home.

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