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48 Sentences With "has the nerve"

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

Now she has the nerve to make a pitty post!
Let's hope Mr. Heineken has the nerve to hand himself in.
And then Potratz has the nerve to call Hartley two-faced.
And Lee has the nerve to try to say that he didn't.
At 36A and 40A, what does one say to him, if one has the nerve?
The company also has the nerve to suggest that 30 minutes is enough for a day's reading.
It may lack the energy for fun, but at least it has the nerve to be sad.
Rob actually has the nerve to call Chyna "shady" for not wanting him to go through her messages.
Fitz even has the nerve to tell Olivia to forgive Abby, when that's not his call to make.
You know, for the times when someone has the nerve to vacuum or fall asleep during your favorite show.
Ms. DeVos has proved that she has the nerve to stand up to them on behalf of America's schoolchildren.
What makes Mr. Morales's strategy unusual, however, is that he has the nerve to invoke human rights to cling to power.
His African kingdom, Wakanda, has the nerve to be technologically advanced without an ounce of culture stripped from its Afro-future grounds.
Will Democratic primary voters really want to find out if Howard Schultz similarly has the nerve to launch a third-party run?
Now I always tell my mom not to post stuff about my job and she has the nerve to get offended by it.
Even now, after all that has happened, USA Gymnastics has the nerve to say the very same things it has said all along.
It will be interesting to see who actually has the nerve—not to mention the job security—to be willing to do it.
Yet he's the only man who shows not a shiver of cowardice, and nobody else has the nerve to stand up to Beria.
And even now, after all that has happened, USA Gymnastics has the nerve to say the very same things it has said all along.
And even now, after all that has happened, U.S.A. Gymnastics has the nerve to say the very same things it has said all along.
Major high fives for knocking the popular guy in the windpipe after the girl fight is over and he has the nerve to ask her out.
Rob then has the nerve to complain that Chyna changed her passcode — which she apparently did after the last time she caught Rob snooping through her phone.
His father has the nerve to eat his Pop-Tart, so this hardcore kid carried his beef all the way to school picture day — and the results are stunning.
And yet, he has the nerve to criticize the tech industry for being too powerful, and the gall to say that today's version of capitalism is too focused on profits.
At Nicole's funeral, meanwhile, her conspicuously privileged family and friends whisper and gawk, unable to believe O. J., whom they clearly presume to be guilty, has "the nerve" to show up.
See's Candies has the nerve to tout the word "See's" ... when it denies that fundamental right to those with sight impairments ... so a sight-impaired man claims in a new lawsuit.
It has the nerve to suggest that the social unit is, by definition, self-menacing, and that the home is no longer a sanctuary but a crumbling fortress, under siege from within.
He says too much, and says it with too much unearned earnestness, and has the nerve to show hurt feelings when Frankie is slow, or outright unwilling, to say too much back.
It's unlabeled, so it could signal a new project, an announcement, or new music for all we know, but the countdown has the nerve to end on the already hyped Avengers: Endgame day.
He (Sekulow) has the nerve and the gall to get up there and say that there is no eyewitness testimony when we know that John Bolton has eyewitness testimony and is willing to testify?
Jordan is by all definitions a beautiful specimen of a man who has the nerve to be fine in the face with the body of a Greek god — or in this case — an African king.
"I'd be willing to publicly debate anyone who has the nerve to stand up and take the stance that racing is better with drugs," racehorse owner and celebrity chef Bobby Flay told lawmakers on Thursday.
So, an institution of this stature brings in an artist who can't even tell me why he rotated an image to give it "new meaning," and then the curator has the nerve to try to shield him.
He a little too eager to turn on his supposed best friend and king when Killmonger shows up, and then has the nerve to go against the wishes of his lover, the gorgeous Dora Milaje General Okoye.
In the wake of whatever scandal or financial collapse or recession to which it has contributed, it wipes its hands, distances itself and still has the nerve to put forth its experts as the solution to problems.
"Poroshenko has the nerve and the resolve to go through with the dismissal of Yatseniuk, but he's holding off for now because there aren't enough votes to appoint a new prime minister," said a source in Poroshenko's bloc.
Anyone who draws his ire, anyone whom he feels attacked by or offended by, anyone who has the nerve to stand up for himself or herself and tell him he's wrong, he wants to hate, and does so.
"It really disgusts me knowing that the worst serial killer in history has the nerve to write that book and reopen wounds," Sandra Gagnon, whose sister Janet Henry used to go to Pickton's farm and went missing in 1997, told CBC.
The production's a little scattershot, but note how the glittering synth groove on "Twenty 8" segues effortlessly into the stylistically unrelated dissonant piano loop on "Patty Cake," and be grateful he has the nerve to test his voice against disparate settings.
All Claire has to do is attend the State of the Union in two weeks' time and not get struck down by a lightning bolt when she has the nerve to stage a press conference about her mother's health and then ask for the press to respect the woman's privacy and dignity.
And what playing: the accent has broadened into a snarl; the hair is slicked back, piled high, or daubed with a dazzle of silver at the sides when Celeste is due onstage; and the hands are never still, plucking, splaying, pushing up the sleeves of her jacket, or slamming the table in a diner because the manager has the nerve to request a photograph.
Bridget is a television-news producer, but the movie treats her career with disdain, as little more than an opportunity for unprofessional screwups; Maguire has the nerve to give her heroine a big speech on the "integrity" of proper journalism—this after "Bridget Jones's Baby" has made fun of foreigners' names, and arranged for her to put the wrong Asian guest in front of the cameras.
They only wanted to benefit themselves and children. What a sad story about this family. There were threats, domestic violence, and much more. I hope that one of them has the nerve to make a story one day about the trouble behind closed doors.
The characters behave like simpletons, breaking up and getting back together again at the convenience of the plot. Director Joshua Brand . . . has the nerve to go for the sort of cheerful whimsy of Moonstruck, Sleepless in Seattle and While You Were Sleeping. But whimsy without wit is like an empty smile.
Rose suspects this, but doesn't care. Even sensible Rose is having an affair; she has the nerve of letting Mylo stay at Slepe while Ned is at war. They all seem to go against the normally accepted conventions without worrying about the consequences of their actions - they may, after all, be wiped out tomorrow. Rose married Ned Peel because he was the safest choice, not because she loved him.
Short on money, Kang-jae decides to take on the arranged marriage. Having nothing more than a picture of Kang-jae, Failan spends her days dreaming and wishing that Kang-jae would come to visit her. Failan often writes to Kang-jae in sorrow about how much she misses and thinks about him, but never has the nerve to give the letters to Kang-jae. Things take a turn when Kang-jae is asked by his boss to take the fall for a murder in exchange for some money.
She also collected the Baroness's poems and letters. Barnes' drawing of James Joyce illustrated her 1922 interview with him in Vanity Fair. Barnes arrived in Paris with a letter of introduction to James Joyce, whom she interviewed for Vanity Fair and who became a friend. The headline of her Vanity Fair interview billed him as "the man who is, at present, one of the more significant figures in literature," but her personal reaction to Ulysses was less guarded: "I shall never write another line ... Who has the nerve to after that?"Quotations from Field (109) and Whitley, respectively. It may have been reading Joyce that led Barnes to turn away from the late 19th century Decadent and Aesthetic influences of The Book of Repulsive Women toward the modernist experimentation of her later work.
He speculated that the project might mark the time when society stops using large iconic projects as a tool for lifting areas out of deprivation. He questioned its ability to draw people's attention to Stratford after the Games, in a similar manner to the successes of the Angel of the North or the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. He also questioned the piece's ability to strike a chord like the Angel, which he believed had at least "created a feelgood factor and sense of pride" in Gateshead, or whether it would simply become one of the "many more unloved rotting wrecks that no one has the nerve to demolish". He postulated that the addition of stairs and a lift made Orbit less succinct than Kapoor's previous successful works, while ultimately he said "hard to see what the big idea is, beyond the idea of making something big".

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