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111 Sentences With "frets about"

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

She frets about their son, Shiva, and, because it's the summer of 2016, frets about the coming election, and every so often ponders just how she's "become this scummy rich person," exiled from her principles.
Liz Truss, a Conservative minister, frets about things like occupational regulation.
Mr Dutton frets about an impending tide of paedophiles and murderers.
Rather than accepting this, Carson frets about insulting his employers, i.e.
Mr Osterhuber frets about the "ever-increasing variation" in the state's weather.
Mr. Button also frets about the usable range of electrified sports cars.
She makes mention of identity crises; she frets about her stance and status.
The more one frets about a sleep problem, the worse it can get.
Madison frets about whether or not she's doing the right thing for her family.
I don't think I'm the only parent who frets about their kids' screen time.
Archbishop Kliment, a cleric of the Moscow-aligned patriarchate, frets about threats against the branch's churches.
Yet she frets about him constantly, how he lost his family and career because of their union.
It featured a suburban woman who frets about the possibility that the economic recovery could be fleeting.
Across the northern border, meanwhile, Canada frets about the economic harm that will be caused should NAFTA collapse.
The government frets about skirt lengths; its "pornography control committee" arrests women whose nude pictures have been leaked online.
The central bank frets about an "environment of heightened risks" caused by the surge in debt linked to housing.
France wants to integrate the euro zone further, to prepare it for the next crisis; Germany frets about moral hazard.
When Nancy Grace frets about a pretty missing white girl, trolls literally draw out the grotesque racialized picture she's implying.
Pennypacker said that while the rest of the market frets about tariffs, his crane manufacturer is taking them in stride.
Yet the Home Office is a suspicious place that frets about ever being seen to let in even one illegal immigrant.
He frets about his student loans and the difficulty of finding a job, even fearing that he might end up homeless.
Eriksen's daughter came out 10 years ago, when she was 12, and Eriksen still frets about her emotional and physical safety.
She frets about both consensual sexual attention she gets from men and the impact of her assaults, often in the same breath.
Chrystia Freeland, a journalist-turned-politician, frets about the rise of the "new global super-rich" and the fall of everyone else.
He turned forty-five last week and frets about his weight, but to a less professional eye he still looks pretty lean.
One could argue that only a TV critic frets about episode length: It's a first-world problem in a first-world job.
Mr. Ghani, on the other hand, frets about it, partially because the United States is the strongest ally sustaining him in power.
While the rest of the world frets about the knock-on effect of China's economic slowdown, the Chinese have a bigger worry: themselves.
DONALD TRUMP often frets about Chicago's recent crime wave, calling the city's homicide rate, which has risen sharply this year, a "horror show".
It's not a bad compromise—plus there are sunsets, which are remarkably enjoyable even as she frets about healthcare, climate change, and the future.
Scarlett Rustemeyer, a barista at the Fosko Coffee Barre in Pensacola Beach, said she always frets about power outages whenever storms come through Florida.
If Scott's Times work didn't already mark him as one of these, it would be apparent in how lightly he frets about his record.
When his mother frets about the possibility of reprisals if war with Japan breaks out, Gordon promises he won't let anything happen to her.
Airlines are dirt cheap but that is because the market frets about a price war and the chance of tighter antitrust regulation, not about disruption.
Sansa frets about the reaction of the Stark bannermen, noting they change their allegiance annoyingly quickly (it's season 7, Sansa, everything in GoT happens fast!).
"I am gonna toughen you ladies up," Cathcart snarls, fearing the wrath of his superiors far more than he frets about the lives of his men.
That might explain his readiness to question its free-movement rules—he frets about so-called benefit tourism—and to jab at a meddlesome Brussels bureaucracy.
Matthew frets about Aiden with Maury the Hormone Monster — a character who embodies each child's confused pubescent impulses — but the pair eventually become, well, a pair.
If you're the kind of person who frets about your own mortality, A Ghost Story might be the kind of movie that keeps you up at night.
The FDP dislikes the level of state intervention that switching off power stations might involve, and frets about the damage such plans would do to Germany's industrial heartlands.
The left is suspicious of it as a Trojan horse for right-wing plots to dismantle social supports, while the right frets about money going to the poor.
Practically every government body does that: the business department frets about foreign takeovers, the Ministry of Defence is hardwired into NATO, 10 Downing Street co-ordinates big summits.
BANGKOK/BHUBANESWAR, India (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - On a hot, humid afternoon on the outskirts of Bhubaneswar in eastern India, construction worker Sabitri Mahanand frets about increasingly "dangerous" summers.
As their leaders openly contemplate how to inflict pain on each other, the rest of the world now frets about becoming collateral damage in an escalating trade war.
Meanwhile, Emily frets about her friend Sue (Ella Hunt) marrying her brother (Adrian Blake Enscoe), while resisting pressure from her mother ("30 Rock's" Jane Krakowski) to pair her off.
Indeed, Mrs Merkel frets about whether a European country "with few natural resources and an ageing population", as one of her aides puts it, can stay relevant at all.
Walker's family frets about fortune hunters, but they don't perceive Lister as a threat—and so, tipping her top hat, Lister decides that she will make Walker her wife.
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - As the global oil market frets about a stubborn supply glut, faltering demand growth in key Asian crude importers is further hampering efforts to restore market balance.
Some figures in Mr Rutte's liberal VVD now take an eye-wateringly tough line; their coalition partner, the centre-left Labour Party, frets about refugees undermining support for the welfare state.
N.L."-grade impression — "I feel for ya, I do" — as the senator reassures Ms. Hill but frets about his image: "I'm not going to be the bad guy in this thing.
" Talking about the song's message, Gaga frets about the delusion and deceit she once celebrated: "I believe many of us are wondering why there are so many fake things around us.
He frets about homelier things: about his responsibilities to his family and his job, about the day-to-day irritants of office politics, about the nature and strength of his various loyalties.
Teachout is taking the novel step of challenging a donor directly as the left increasingly frets about the influence of outside money on the political process since the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision.
Mark, who works in finance, frets about his annual bonus and his status, while Karen stays home to tend to Heather, then becomes resentful when Heather grows up and no longer needs her.
Italy's ruling parties failed to reach an agreement on Friday over the planned ESM reform, two lawmakers said, as Rome frets about the impact the changes could have on the country's massive public debt.
" Mr. Blum frets about the White House swallowing his former communications chief, Josh Raffel, who left him to become Jared Kushner's lieutenant, much like the hero of "Get Out" is swallowed by "the sunken place.
Katrin Wiencek, headteacher at the school in Bad Belzig and head of the local DL branch, frets about parents on dark school runs crashing into the deer and boar that stalk the forests around the town.
Jack -- he wouldn't give his last name -- told our photog he needs a lawyer to help determine his next move, but he frets about the clear power imbalance between him and the famous Rolls-Royce driver.
Then there's Celia, their only daughter, a strong and levelheaded youth counselor in San Francisco, and her younger brother, Alec, an idealistic journalist who frets about his mother, siblings, money, politics and just about everything else.
This tension exists for anyone who enjoys the real-time conversations on Twitter but loathes the trolls, loves Facebook but abhors fake news, or depends on the convenience Alexa offers but frets about violations of privacy.
Cole's wife, Luisa (Catalina Sandino Moreno), frets about deportation and about Alison's lingering influence on Cole; Alison, meanwhile, meets the latest in her long line of problematic men (a veteran and recovering alcoholic played by Ramon Rodriguez).
His stated concern with our country's social divisions maps awkwardly onto his willingness to remove transgender Americans serving in the military, which has exacerbated the very divisions he now frets about in the pages of the Atlantic.
After Mr. Ingels has received a concussion from a baseball bat (an incident not elaborated upon), he frets about an M.R.I. and the circumstances behind the deaths of the architectural giants Le Corbusier, Louis Kahn and Eero Saarinen.
Paula Romano, 31, whose protection expires March 18, frets about losing the $73,000 salary that she earns managing the office of an oil-field company in Hobbs, N.M. For years, she toiled in the underground economy in food service.
ROME (Reuters) - Italy's ruling parties failed to reach an agreement on Friday over a planned reform of the euro zone's bailout fund, two lawmakers said, as Rome frets about the impact the changes could have on the country's massive public debt.
ROME (Reuters) - Italy's ruling parties failed to reach an agreement on Friday over a planned reform of the euro zone's bailout fund, two lawmakers said, as Rome frets about the impact the changes could have on the country's massive public debt.
Let the Sunshine In is a rom-com only insofar as our heroine, a successful painter and divorcee, drinks and sleeps with a lot of men and frets about it later; but the laughs are few and the sighs are heavy.
When he frets about the philosopher Peter Singer's extreme demand that we sacrifice our deepest personal commitments to help starving people on the other side of the planet, he purports to be showing us how hard it is to obey Singer's theory.
In August, we reported on RealtyTrac's much juicier, and darker, version of what is going on with Chinese buyers in West Coast markets [Foreign "Smart Money" Frets about Turmoil at Home, Flees, Plows into US Housing Bubble 2, Thinks it's a "Safe Haven"].
Yet her patients clearly love her: gifts are proffered; a song is sung for her during a house call; and, when one poor fellow, diabetic and overweight, frets about paying his gas bill, she calls social services and fixes the problem on the spot.
He's hardly wrong to touch upon the inherent social, cultural and moral tensions of a love relationship between an Asian man and a white woman; still, the absence of resistance from the culture he frets about betraying leaves him talking essentially only to himself.
It applies when people express dismay that a robotics team made up of Afghan girls may be barred from entering the United States; when someone frets about the American poverty rate; when The Associated Press shares information about a deadly oil-tanker fire in Pakistan.
At the Tokyo Game Show, dominated by yet more shooting games and role-playing fantasy titles that likely appeal to the "zombies" Miyamoto frets about, Nintendo's Splatoon game for the Wii U - with paint splashing, squid-like characters battling for territory - won the best game award. Nintendo?
Although she insists she does not want the job, Ruth Davidson, leader of the Scottish Conservatives and a gay mother-to-be, has emerged as a potential leader who could change perceptions of a party that frets about its chronic lack of appeal to younger voters.
The infighting has been heightened by the economic uncertainty caused by Brexit, with reduced investment in key British industrial sectors, subdued economic growth and a decline in living standards as business frets about a "cliff edge" change in trading rules ahead of Britain's planned departure in 2019.
When he sets out to buy a rare Charlie Parker record, the camera, shooting in grainy 16 millimeter, follows him on a journey around Brooklyn, which includes a funny sequence involving a bike chase, and a recurring bit in which Mr. Coopersmith frets about his new shirt.
Ms. Spence's daily routine of picking up and dropping off children resembles a never-ending pinball game; the homeless shelter, she said, cannot allow her children to be there without parental supervision, so she often frets about where they can pass the time when she is not around.
A foursome of jealous, bored girlfriends serves as a chorus commenting on events as Getty frets about who will succeed him in the family oil business, humiliates various offspring and plays the aging satyr, receiving an injection for erectile dysfunction while complaining about his son's and grandson's drug use.
In a letter she wrote to herself during the internship — her method of working out her feelings at the time — she frets about all the ways she's alienating her 41-year-old boyfriend with her "nagging" and her "guilt-inflicting"; she says Kricfalusi doesn't care about her emotional well-being.
But in New York, despite making much more than she ever has (she is hired at a hundred and thirty thousand dollars, the equivalent of about three hundred thousand today), she frets about it constantly, feels that she never has enough, and finds herself obliged to act as if she had more than she does.
It is Jane who eagerly urges Mary Poppins to resume her post while Michael frets about wages (it's unclear whether Mary actually cares about being paid for her labor, or if she needs the money; she tends to broach the discussion as a matter of ceremony and then just as quickly wave it away).
As the first collaboration between the two French powerhouses, Let the Sunshine In has been dubbed a rom-com — and it is insofar as our heroine, a successful painter and divorcee, drinks and sleeps with a lot of men and frets about it later (sometimes to her over-sharing gay pal at the corner poissonnerie).
But a growing chorus of critics frets about the effects of the low-rate world—a topsy-turvy place where savers are charged a fee, where the yields on a large fraction of rich-world government debt come with a minus sign, and where central banks matter more than markets in deciding how capital is allocated.
And though he variously frets about the state of his love life and enjoys career successes, his own emotions generally take a backseat to the turmoil around him, even as we see him wracked with guilt over the disappearance and alleged suicide of a colleague turned lover or struggling with the loss of a high school girlfriend.
At a time when N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver openly frets about player happiness — and when standouts such as Boston's Kyrie Irving and Golden State's Kevin Durant routinely rail against the approach of some of the news media — Butler is the rare star who savors the game's edgy side and has embraced his portrayal as a villain.
Restricted immigration, public religion, and space travel are his prescriptions for a society whose main problems he believes to be a lack of community, vitality, and inspiration, but in truth, the main problem with our current condition is that while a small subset of the population frets about the impact of sex robots on romantic life, vast swaths of that same society still lack basic shelter and nourishment and, furthermore, that the latter condition makes the former possible.
Meanwhile, Kelly frets about yet another confrontation with Christina Aguilera, this time during the MTV Europe Awards.
The TARDIS dematerialises just as the Brigadier arrives, and frets about letting Buckingham Palace know that their guests will be late for a celebratory dinner.
Leora waits lying by the sea on the beach. She frets about whether or not Corrinado has survived. As dawn approaches, she sees a speck on the horizon: Corrinado has arrived. He sets his balloon down on the shore, and Leora climbs in with him.
The astonishing course of events leads to an atmosphere in which Don Rodrigo can be defied openly and his fortunes take a turn for the worse. Don Abbondio is reprimanded by the archbishop. Lucia, miserable about her vow to renounce Renzo, still frets about him. He is now the subject of diplomatic conflict between Milan and Bergamo.
She is angered when Gabe initially doesn't say anything but he finally says it is symbolic of the natural evolution of a relationship. She frets about how they'll not follow the same path as Tom and Beth. Gabe reassures her by “scaring” her (a tease he does to show her his affection) and kisses her. She kisses him back.
Conde examines Russell, and diagnoses him as terminally ill. Julio is supposed to prepare breakfast, but reports that no supplies have arrived at the mansion. When Lucía tries to take some of the ladies to her bedroom to freshen up, they cannot leave the dining room. Blanca frets about her children, but even she and her husband Alberto Roc, a conductor, cannot leave.
All agree that "This Had Better Come To A Stop." Jason is acting up again, and Trina phones Mendel frantically to "Please Come To Our House" for dinner and therapy. Mendel arrives and immediately charms Trina. He and Jason settle down for "Jason's Therapy," in which Jason frets about his future and Mendel, in a very round- about way, encourages him to simply relax and enjoy life.
Irene invites Marion for Christmas, and Marion meets Avice, an elderly lady who frets about leaving her rabbits at home alone. Marion is soon rabbit-sitting, cleaning and cooking for Avice regularly. Fowler, Marion's homeless brother, sometimes visits her flat for a meal, drink or a bed for the night. On one visit he finds the morphine in her bathroom cupboard and substitutes it for cough mixture so she won't notice.
Claire gives the ground rules about this job. Later at the apartment, Nico frets about Wilhelmina's future when she mentions the only other option, Connor. Wilhelmina believes that Connor will find her and Nico, believing her, tells her mother that if she is going to do it for her, then do it for herself [Wilhelmina]. Hours later, Wilhelmina tells Claire that she is quitting as co-editor-in-chief.
Act I The timeless story of Cyrano de Bergerac is one of the most famous romances of all time. Where better to set this story of unrequited feelings, love notes, and physical insecurity than a high school? On the first morning of their last year of high school, we see four seniors having a "Security Meltdown". Calvin frets about the size of his nose, which prevents him from pursuing the girl of his dreams, Rosanna.
In the second half of the film, Rahul and Anjali move to London, where they enjoy an affluent lifestyle, among several non-Indian neighbours and friends. However, there is a perpetual dissatisfaction among them, especially Anjali, in living away from home. Additionally, she dresses up in a traditional sari and performs the duties of a loyal housemaker. She also frets about her son and younger sister being "too influenced" by Western culture.
The mother frets about her daughter maturing into a woman, reflective of Jamaica Kincaid's own experiences growing up with her forceful mother in Antigua. The structure consists of a single sentence, punctuated by semi- colons, detailing the advice imparted from mother to daughter. The mother's voice is predominant in the narrative, only interrupted twice by the daughter who makes a feigned attempt to defend herself. “In the Night” was first published in The New Yorker on July 24, 1978.
In early episodes, Bosley takes a playfully antagonistic role to the Angels. He also frets about vacation days, car damages, and timeliness when the opportunity arises.R White—Lipgloss Feminists: Charlie's Angels and The Bionic Woman, Storytelling: A Critical Journal of Popular Narrative (2006) Bosley is apparently the only Townsend Agency employee to have ever met Charlie, and he remains steadfast in never revealing Charlie's identity, or even a clue as to what he looks like. This was a running joke in the series.
In July 1950, Ma and Pa Kettle come home after their fun and exciting trip to New York City only to find out that they're going to become grandparents. Tom's wife Kim is expecting a child. As Tom frets about the pregnancy, the whole Kettle household is happy with the family's newest addition. Right in the middle of their breakfast the Kettles receive a telegram delivered by Alvin, the Western Union delivery boy, from Jonathan and Elizabeth Parker (Kim's parents) declaring that they will soon arrive at the Kettle house to see the newborn.
Madison and Alexandra arrive at Louise's with vodka and people later start arriving, including Keegan and Travis, and Louise frets about alcohol in the house, but Madison and Alexandra reassure Louise that they will make non-alcoholic drinks for the three of them. Louise unknowingly has drinks that Madison and Alexandra spiked, resulting in Louise getting drunk. Madison and Alexandra take selfies with Louise when she is too drunk to know about it. Louise is sick and as she staggers outside, she collapses after bringing up blood, panicking Madison, Alexandra, Keegan, Travis and Bex.
During Buffy's 17th birthday, Drusilla and Spike resurrect a powerful demon called "The Judge" (Brian Thompson) who can burn the humanity out of people and who claims to be invincible. After Buffy and Angel escape from his attack, the two finally consummate their relationship which brings Angel "a moment of perfect happiness" and ends up costing him his soul. Buffy wakes up in Angel's bed the following morning alone and frets about his disappearance. Later she returns to his apartment where he torments her about giving up her virginity to him.
The Second Encounter starts where the previous game left off, with Sam traveling to Sirius on the SSS Centerprice. Unfortunately, the starship is accidentally hit by the "Croteam crate-bus" and plummets down to Earth's surface. As the starship falls, Sam reads the coordinates and frets about crash-landing into Egypt again, but instead he crashes into Central America in the Mayan age, with the starship now heavily damaged upon impact. However, not all hope is lost, since the Sirians left a "back-up starship" on Earth, which was a fail-safe in case anything ever happened to the SSS Centerprice.
Sara Godfrey: the protagonist, who is convinced that her fourteenth summer is "the worst summer of her life." She and her two siblings have been living with their Aunt Willie ever since their mother died six years before. (Their father works in Ohio and visits on occasional weekends.) Sara is portrayed as a very superficial girl, obsessed with the way things (especially her body) look, and constantly frets about her feet, which she believes are too large. She seems to hold grudges easily; for example, her grudge against Joe Melby, a boy whom she once had a conflict with at school.
In another incident of stranding, the narrator takes her children to the local shopping mall, where they are prevented from leaving by a severe rainstorm and flash flooding. The narrator often frets about global problems and how these might negatively affect her and her family. These problems include the following: climate change; the mistreatment of industrial livestock (especially chickens); viral pandemics; mass shootings and other forms of violence; economic uncertainty; and the U.S. presidency of Donald Trump. A frequently mentioned problem is the widespread pollution of the world's streams, lakes, and oceans by plastic, industrial chemicals, and pharmacological substances.
In order to ascertain whether beating the record is feasible, he decides to call his sister in Moscow to obtain a recent report on the limits of concrete pouring. Margulies soon examines the day-to- day operations of the site to figure out how he can optimize production, but he initially forbids Ishchenko, a leader of one shock brigade, from trying to beat Kharkov's record. Nalbandov, chief engineer of the construction, frets about the attempt to break the record; he thinks the effort is not worth the risk. He goes to see Margulies and tell him that allotting less to each mixture is unsafe.
Hoff uses many of Milne's characters to symbolize ideas that differ from or accentuate Taoist tenets. Winnie-the-Pooh himself, for example, personifies the principles of wu wei, the Taoist concept of "effortless doing," and p'u, the concept of being open to, but unburdened by, experience, and it is also a metaphor for natural human nature. In contrast, characters like Owl and Rabbit over-complicate problems, often over-thinking to the point of confusion, and Eeyore pessimistically complains and frets about existence, unable to just be. Hoff regards Pooh's simpleminded nature, unsophisticated worldview and instinctive problem-solving methods as conveniently representative of the Taoist philosophical foundation.
However, Ryu and Aoi are confronted by the Commander Dopant, who is a police officer who murdered Aoi's father. Placing a bomb on Aoi and shooting Jinno with Ryu's gun, the Commander Dopant forces Ryu to help the girl obtain an item she stole some time ago. By then, while with Shotaro and Philip at the Shirogane restaurant as she frets about her relationship to Ryu, Akiko freaks out upon hearing the news of her husband on the run for attempted murder and under the idea that he is having an affair. Tracking down the last surviving pickpocket, Masaru, Ryu and Aoi learn the item in now held by the pickpocketing ring's leader.
In 2028, Earth is suffering from a global energy crisis. The space agencies of the world prepare to test the Shepard particle accelerator aboard the orbiting Cloverfield Station, which would provide Earth with infinite energy, while conspiracy theorists fear it will create the "Cloverfield Paradox", opening portals to parallel universes allowing their horrors to threaten Earth. Among the crew is Ava Hamilton, a British engineer who frets about leaving her husband Michael potentially for years, as their relationship struggles since the loss of their children to a house fire. The crew is rounded out by American commander Kiel, German physicist Ernst Schmidt, Brazilian medical doctor Monk Acosta, Irish engineer Mundy, Russian engineer Volkov, and Chinese engineer Tam.
The story begins with Betty pitching the story of swimsuit pioneer Annette Kellerman (who looks a great deal like Betty in the kinescope sequence), the Australian-born swimmer, actress and entertainer, who was arrested in 1907 for indecent exposure after she walked onto a public beach in Boston in a one-piece swimsuit for Mode's upcoming "Fearless" issue. As Wilhelmina reminds the staff about the Bahamas layout and the last shoot she will make for Mode, Marc frets about Nico, Connor, Wilhelmina's and most of all, his future, as this is her last issue. Wilhelmina assures Marc that she has a plan to become an editor at one of Mode's competitors, and that he will continue to be her assistant. Back at Casa Suarez, Hilda shows off a scene from "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition," when Justin arrives with Bobby.
"The Seinfeld Chronicles" (also known as "Good News, Bad News" or "Pilot") is the pilot episode of the American sitcom Seinfeld, which first aired on NBC on July 5, 1989. The first of the 180 Seinfeld episodes, the pilot was written by show creators Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld, and directed by Art Wolff. The episode revolves around a fictionalized version of Seinfeld, who is unsure about the romantic intentions of a woman he met, and frets about the meaning of her signals with his best friend George (Jason Alexander) and neighbor Kessler (Michael Richards, whose character would later be renamed "Kramer"). Though they had been asked to put together a 90-minute TV special, Seinfeld and David wrote a TV pilot as they felt their "show about nothing" concept would fit better in the shorter, more conventional half-hour format.

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