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45 Sentences With "kidded"

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

"I experienced virtual reality in the sixties a lot," he kidded.
We'd never kidded ourselves that this trip would be entirely without misadventure.
On Thursday, Darvish kidded that maybe his goodwill would lead to good luck.
And so, you know, maybe I shouldn't have kidded with him about that.
She thought about how her husband's friend had kidded her about her friendship with Liz, and kidded Liz about the bumper stickers on her car — "Tolerance" and "Coexist" and "READ" — and how she had laughed it off until one day it wasn't funny anymore.
In the skit, Clinton kidded de Blasio about his delay in endorsing her bid for the White House.
He kidded Mr. Christie, "Thank you, Chris, for being the bad guy," according to some in attendance who paraphrased Mr. Trump's remarks.
The president kidded Mr. Stallone, who through a representative declined an interview request, about not wanting reporters called into the Oval Office.
Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) kidded with Vindman about also being an identical twin, offering a light reprieve to an otherwise tense hearing.
Yes, they get kidded about their age, but personal shout-outs from the band onstage often silence that nonsense, Mr. Anderson said.
Her sister had kidded her about her sexual orientation for years, and Ms. Jordan said she has always been "in awe" of older women.
When I kidded with her that for a tough biker she seemed to break into tears a lot, she thought for a long time.
"He kidded with the fountain girls, thought the lights more beautiful than ever, felt that the world was a very happy place," the researchers reported.
The cost of the diamond and setting really, really depends upon what Lane is offering, but don't be kidded into thinking that they're on the cheap end.
Young girls in white hijabs kidded around in front of an Islamic center on West 116th Street, on a street that anchors a neighborhood sometimes called Little Senegal.
When tonight's Oscars started, Jimmy Kimmel kidded that it might also be his last because of how quickly the event hosts are replaced, and I really hope he's right.
He was loudly welcomed by slugger Yoenis Cespedes and kidded by Pittsburgh native Neil Walker - the second baseman barbed Tebow for once leading the Denver Broncos over the Steelers in the playoffs.
"It's the old prodigal son coming home; I'll be on that bridge, I might even be driving that ship myself," kidded a hopeful Frank Del Rio, who thinks relations will continue easing.
" Kimmel also took a furry little swipe at Call Me By Your Name's Best Oscar nominee, Timothée Chalamet, when he kidded that the young star was "missing Paw Patrol to be here tonight.
The exchange was posted all over social media, and James even kidded afterward that he wasn't much of a beer drinker and would have taken a sip if it had been red wine.
During closing statements, Deputy District Attorney Liz Owen said Nelson denied having a relationship with the student but had kidded with detectives about "hooking up with a 14-year-old," the Associated Press reports.
A few years ago, he was teaching a film course at U.C.L.A., and a professor from California Lutheran University, who was consulting with him on a screenplay, kidded him about his lack of a diploma.
"He would follow pigeons around" as a toddler, said his mother, Lisa Hsia, a television executive whose friends kidded her about how unlikely it was that she was raising a naturalist who barely uses a cellphone or social media.
In July 2016, she complained to reporters for The Associated Press and The New York Times about then-candidate Donald Trump, saying she could not take him seriously, and kidded that if he won she might move to New Zealand.
When I interviewed Reitman earlier this year, she told me she developed Workin' Moms after she broke down in front of her coworkers while shooting a movie in Philadelphia; the guys were mostly improv actors who kidded her for missing her first Mother's Day.
Baltimore manager Buck Showalter kidded with his charges when he broke the news to them: "The good news is that you made the team, the bad news is you made the team," he quipped in reference to the team's demanding travel schedule this month.
The film was a hit at the box office, earning over $2 million in the US. "The film offers laughs" said the Los Angeles Times.Hookah Melodramas Kidded at Last Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 1 Aug 1947: 6.
The formulas and the constant reiteration of such themes as "You and God can do anything" are very nearly blasphemous."Ibid G. Bromley Oxnam, a Methodist bishop in Washington D.C., also weighed in. "When you are told that if you follow seven easy rules you will become president of your company, you are being kidded. There just aren't that many openings.
The designers were brought back to the studio for the announcement of winner. Floresca was eliminated first, leaving Tampus and Lagat in contention for the title. Herrera then called Lagat as the winner of Project Runway Philippines, who then fell on his knees and shed tears of joy. He kidded Tampus that his reaction was "embarrassing" and his knees were hurt because of it.
There are slight differences in accounts of how his ship was captured, with one source saying the Italians "trapped him by a ruse", and the other saying the Germans "kidded him" to make landfall in their territory. Regardless, Palmer and his crew became prisoners of war in Italy. He was well liked in the POW camps and always had a positive effect on his companions.
Mann's film career spanned four decades. He first came to the attention of CBC audiences in 1953 when he kidded around with the puppet Uncle Chichimus on the show Let's See. According to a CBC Archives article, Mann got the job when his friend, actor Don Harron, pointed him out to producer Norman Jewison. Apart from his CBC work, he appeared in more than 20 movies, with roles in In the Heat of the Night, Bullitt and The Sting.
Petersen Balogh 2009 pp.163-164 Dane's former comedy partner, George K. Arthur, mentioned Dane's final venture in his memoir: > ... Another man might have kidded and clowned and made a feature of being > "mine host" in a restaurant, but when Karl opened his hot dog stand in > Westwood his own feeling of despair must have been served across the counter > with the hamburgers. People could not bear to watch it. So they didn't come > to buy his hamburgers.
Jones and Hare kidded the "talkies", but were featured in A Movietone Divertissement (MGM, 1928) and Rambling 'Round Radio Row #4 (Warner Brothers/Vitaphone, 1932), both sound short subjects. Radio's "Happiness Boys" changed their identities and allegiance whenever they changed sponsors. For Taystee Bread, for example, Jones and Hare became "The Taystee Loafers", and for Interwoven Socks they became "The Interwoven Pair". Regardless of their affiliation, they continued with their songs and jokes through the 1930s.
48 "Things were ironed out when she discovered some of us knew what we were doing," kidded Wyler. What originally attracted him to direct Streisand was similar to what attracted him about Audrey Hepburn, who had also been new to film audiences. He met with Streisand during her musical run and became excited at the prospect of guiding another new star into an award- winning performance. He sensed and admired that Streisand had the same kind of dedication to being an actress as did Bette Davis, early in her career.
Richard L. Riedel, a Senate press gallery attendant in the 1920s and 1930s, recalled, "When [Robinson] would go into one of his rages, it took little imagination to see fire and smoke rolling out of his mouth like some fierce dragon. Even when he kidded me, he spoke in loud gasps while puffing his cigar. Robinson could make Senators and everyone in his presence quake by the burning fire of his eyes, the baring of his teeth as he ground out the words, and the clenching of his mighty fists as he beat on the desk before him."Riedel, 142.
" Henri spoke of being as white as shrouds once the dirt of the day had been washed off, then of their bodies being drained by diarrhoea, before continuing: :"At night, in our rooms, we can't sleep. We twitch and dance and jig about as though we were doing St Vitus's Dance..." :"There's less flesh on our bodies than on a skeleton", Francis said.Londres, Albert: Les frères Pélissier et leur camarade Ville abandonnent, Le Petit Parisien, 27 June 1924, France Francis Pélissier said much later: "Londres was a famous reporter but he didn't know about cycling. We kidded him a bit with our cocaine and our pills.
After college, Andrews stayed in Colorado, working first as a plumber's apprentice on a construction site south of Colorado Springs. When kidded by coworkers about where her "fancy education" had gotten her, she happily taught them about the ancient seaway that had once existed in the area, sharing the fossils she had found up while digging for drain pipes that had been buried by the backhoe. Andrews next took a job at the U.S. Geological Survey, working under legendary Grand Canyon geologist Edwin D. McKee from 1974 to 1980. In her work, she studied modern sand dunes in order to understand ancient sand dune rock formations.
Around 1933 Moore joined the Civilian Conservation Corps, working for the forestry division at a camp in Poplar Bluff, Missouri. Determined to become a boxer, he decided to make his work at the camp a form of training. He later recalled that the other boys constantly kidded him about one daily exercise—standing upright in the bed of a truck as it drove along primitive forest roads, waiting until the last possible moment before ducking or weaving away from tree branches. The captain of the camp permitted him to organize a boxing team, which competed in Golden Gloves tournaments in southern Missouri and Illinois.
" Henri spoke of being as white as shrouds once the dirt of the day had been washed off, then of their bodies being drained by diarrhea, before continuing: :"At night, in our rooms, we can't sleep. We twitch and dance and jig about as though we were doing St Vitus's Dance..." :"There's less flesh on our bodies than on a skeleton," Francis said.Londres, Albert: Les frères Pélissier et leur camarade Ville abandonnent, Le Petit Parisien, 27 June 2014, France Francis Pélissier said much later: "Londres was a famous reporter but he didn't know about cycling. We kidded him a bit with our cocaine and our pills.
Douglas, married at the time, called the police and told them he was not the Kirk mentioned in the note. When interviewed via telephone by the head of the investigating team, Douglas stated that he had "talked and kidded with her a bit" on set, but that he had never been out with her. Spangler's girlfriends told police that she was three months pregnant when she disappeared, and scholars such as Jon Lewis of Oregon State University have speculated that she may have been considering an illegal abortion. In 1951, Douglas starred as a newspaper reporter anxiously looking for a big story in Ace in the Hole, director Billy Wilder's first effort as both writer and producer.
Evaluations by Ture's associates are also mixed, with most praising his efforts and others criticizing him for failing to find constructive ways to achieve his objectives. SNCC's final chair, Phil Hutchings, who expelled Ture over a dispute about the Black Panther Party, wrote, "Even though we kidded and called him 'Starmichael', he could sublimate his ego to get done what was needed to be done....He would say what he thought, and you could disagree with it but you wouldn't cease being a human being and someone with whom he wanted to be in relationship."Mike Miller (1999), "Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael) – Memories", Civil Rights Movement Veterans website. Washington Post staff writer Paula Span described Carmichael as someone who was rarely hesitant to push his own ideology.
Though Freberg often directly parodied songs (or "kidded" them, in his phrase), his recording of "Ya Got Trouble" was a straightforward recording of the song, arranged and conducted by his longtime collaborator Billy May. Freberg wrote that the subtle parody in the recording lay in the fact that it was recorded in an empty concert hall, as were many Broadway soundtrack albums, with the characteristic echo of such large empty space. Also, during the 2010 Writers Guild Awards, Seth MacFarlane, creator of Family Guy, did a parody of the song entitled "Ya Got Trouble" but it was about unscripted shows. MacFarlane also sang the song in his second BBC Proms appearance with The John Wilson Orchestra, "Prom 59: The Broadway Sound", on August 27, 2012.
The last person up on Shrove Tuesday was called the "Fastnacht" and kidded all day long for being late for this wonderful breakfast. In the same way, the last person up on Ash Wednesday was also teased, and called the "Ashepuddle", whose chore for the day was to carry the ashes in the stoves and ovens outside to the ash pile. Fastnachts were a winter staple of the Dutch housewife and could be eaten long past Ash Wednesday, even though originally fried in pork lard, the day before Lent. Shrove Tuesday fastnacht baking was a way of life in which the Pennsylvania Dutch people celebrated its ethnicity, more than going to church; it was a folk-life practice that was more personal.
Joe, who was definitely more sensible and open-minded, didn't see Cliff's sudden declaration of homosexuality robbing any aspect of their relationship. Lou assured his baby brother "Cliffie" that he loved and respected him no matter what, but was convinced early on that what Cliff was feeling was just a phase, and came up with numerous efforts to "cure" him of being gay. Cliff's relationship with the both of them was part brotherly, but also that of fathers and son, since Lou and Joe had almost 20 years on Cliff (their mother died when Cliff was an infant, followed a few years later by their dad; Lou and Joe raised Cliff for the majority of his youth). He was very much independent minded, and kidded around with his brothers in the usual way siblings do, but at times looked to them for guidance and was very much overprotected by Lou and Joe.
When Hodges' slump continued into the following spring, fans reacted with countless letters and good-luck gifts, and one Brooklyn priest – Father Herbert Redmond of St. Francis Roman Catholic Church – told his flock: "It's far too hot for a homily. Keep the Commandments and say a prayer for Gil Hodges." Hodges began hitting again soon afterward, and rarely struggled again in the World Series. Teammate Carl Erskine, who described himself as a good Baptist, kidded him by saying, "Gil, you just about made a believer out of me."Bums: An Oral History of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Peter Golenbock, Dover Publications, 1984. Hodges was involved in a blown call in the 1952 World Series. Johnny Sain was batting for the Yankees in the 10th inning of Game 5 and grounded out, as ruled by first base umpire Art Passarella. The photograph of the play, however, shows Sain stepping on first base while Hodges, also with a foot on the bag, is reaching for the ball that is about a foot shy of entering his glove.

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