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9 Sentences With "makes faces"

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

The combination makes faces appear especially vivid, emerging from the darkness like ships at sea.
The Handmaid's Tale could be retitled Elisabeth Moss Makes Faces, and it would be an equally accurate descriptor.
Thunberg is great at Twitter, and she makes faces that beg to be memed, but so do lots of people.
In another clip, taken from inside the delivery room, Kim makes faces at Thompson — and playfully threatens to cut the NBA player's throat behind his back.
In an interview, Dr. Brown provided the most familiar example: how almost every person makes faces and sounds when meeting an infant for the first time.
Although somewhat hampered by an uneven cast and a limited budget (the movie has a digital look that makes faces putty colored and robs them of detail), Ms. Kusama mostly works around her production limitations.
Her last exhibition was Artists Make Faces at Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery in 2013.Plymouth exhibition Artists Makes Faces is last by Monika Kinley , Plymouth Herald, 27 September 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2014. In total she curated over 30 exhibitions of outsider art, both in the UK and overseas.
Ryu Bok-hee (Kim Bo-mi) has dreams of becoming Miss Korea; she carries a small hand mirror and makes faces to herself. Jung Su-ji (Min Hyo-rin) is a quiet, mysterious beauty; whenever she speaks to Na- mi, it is always with disdain.At one point in the film, Na-mi confronts Su-ji and learns that Su-ji's stepmother is from Jeollado, the same province Na-mi is from, making Su-ji automatically biased against Na-mi. The two make up after drinking soju, and crying out their frustrations together.
Dancing the jitterbug, Los Angeles, 1939 According to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) the word "jitterbug" is a combination of the words "jitter" and "bug"; both words are of unknown origin. The first use of the word "jitters" quoted by the OED is from 1929, Act II of the play Strictly Dishonorable by Preston Sturges where the character Isabelle says: "Willie's got the jitters" is answered by a judge "Jitters?" to which Isabelle answers "You know, he makes faces all the time." The second quote in the OED is from the N.Y. Press from 2 April 1930: "The game is played only after the mugs and wenches have taken on too much gin and they arrive at the state of jitters, a disease known among the common herd as heebie jeebies." According to H. W. Fry in his review of Dictionary of Word Origins by Joseph Twadell Shipley in 1945 the word "jitters" "is from a spoonerism ['bin and jitters' for 'gin and bitters']...and originally referred to one under the influence of gin and bitters".

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