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32 Sentences With "most stereotypical"

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

Summer is tied up and ravaged by the most stereotypical alien-looking creature one can imagine.
And during that appearance, she told one of the most stereotypical LA dating stories we've ever heard.
The most stereotypical New York couple sits down next to us — bro-y finance dude and girl with fresh Drybar blowout.
We are introduced to a group of people who are probably the most stereotypical millennials and get-off-my-lawn Gen Xers in the country.
He's liable to call you "mate" several times in a conversation, and can say "sorry" with a tone that'll make even the most stereotypical Canadian melt.
The video, directed by Willo Perron, features Annie Clark cycling through L.A.'s most stereotypical spots — a yoga studio, a nail salon, and a plastic surgeon's chair.
Photo: Lynne Sladky (AP)One of the most stereotypical relaxing things to do—meditation—may actually cause distress for some people, according to the findings of a survey released this week.
"There is a past and in some ways present tendency to minimize contact or penetration that doesn't meet the most stereotypical elements of assault: gunpoint, violence, penetration, ejaculation, injuries everywhere," she said.
In this way, the Landrys painted their students in the "most stereotypical light that they possibly could be in to try and gain some white sympathy to get them into school," Mr. Smith said.
And because Ozark doesn't seem to realize this is the pool it's playing in, it can't avoid having almost every rural, lower-class character in its story become the most stereotypical version of themselves.
It supplements tracks from video games with curious playlists that appear to be tailored to the most stereotypical image of people who like video games — the angsty kind who loves bands like Limp Bizkit, Atreyu, or Breaking Benjamin, and little else.
In the most stereotypical (and by now probably outdated) terms, a "basic bitch" wears North Face, leggings, and Uggs, and absolutely adores hashtag-PSLs, marking her as a woman with "a girlish interest in seasonal changes and an unsophisticated penchant for sweet," as the Cut noted back in 913.
This time around, the jury didn't buy it when Cosby and his lawyers tried to shame and discredit Constand in the most stereotypical and sexist terms, describing her as a gold-digger and a con artist who had deliberately tried to set up Cosby for a big payday.
She was praised for her ability to insert individuality and personality to even the most stereotypical roles. She married the actor Adam Gottlob Gielstrup.
UGO.com listed T. Hawk as one of Street Fighter's "unforgettable characters," alongside Blanka, Chun-Li, Sagat, M. Bison, Zangief, Dhalsim, Vega, Balrog, E. Honda, Guile, Cammy, Dee Jay, and Fei Long. In 2011, Dorkly ranked him as the third most stereotypical character in video games, commenting on his appearance: "This is what science imagines men looked like back when dinner meant choking a woolly mammoth to death." In 2012, Complex magazine ranked T. Hawk as the second most stereotypical character in video games (representing stereotypical 'American Indians'), commenting, "this fighter sets an entire people back to teepees and scalping" and adding, "Ah Thunderhawk, if you die in a John Wayne movie, it will be only fitting."Chad Hunter, The 15 Most Stereotypical Characters In Video Games, Complex.
Conversely, however, some criticized what was perceived as oversexualization of the character, with io9 including a Jade costume among 2011's "sluttiest and weirdest" store-bought Halloween dress-ups. Jade and Kitana represented the "women who fight" trope in Chad Hunter's 2012 Complex list of the fifteen most stereotypical characters in video games, as embodying "half-naked skanks who can fight, hurl lasers and perform aerobatic attacks while wearing thongs, high-heeled boots and keeping their giant breasts under scarves."Chad Hunter, The 15 Most Stereotypical Characters In Video Games, Complex.com, May 9, 2010.
In an NPR interview, Middle East expert Dr. Jack Shaheen of Southern Illinois University cites Road to Morocco as "one of the most stereotypical films ever to come out of Hollywood."NPR website entry The films themselves were spoofing the popular adventure movies of the time, however.
The 25 Best Looking Sideline Chicks in Games, Complex.com, August 15, 2011. Andrew Bridgman from Dorkly listed her as one of the most stereotypical Native American characters in fighting game history, ranking her at seventh place, tying with her daughter Julia. Andrew Rivera from Complex compared her to the Street Fighter series character T. Hawk.
Obsessive-compulsive disorder and obsessive-compulsive personality disorder are two distinct psychological disorders, but media portrayals are often very simplistic and do not reflect the difference between the two. Though disorders can manifest themselves in a very wide range of symptoms, portrayals often tend towards caricature, and emphasize only the most stereotypical of symptoms. In addition, the phrase "obsessive-compulsive" is often casually used to describe behavior which may be picky or pedantic, but is not at all close to the diagnostic criteria for obsessive-compulsive behavior.
He is often seen to disrupt any important matters at hand whenever he has the most extremely subtle (false) hint that Nanako may be in trouble. He disapproves of Shin-chan's love for his daughter though they both band together in keeping an eye on her. :In the Funimation dub, he is known as Will Cumton, and is re-imagined as a vampire who exclusively appears in the episode "True Twillight Diaries". Similar to most stereotypical vampires, he is afraid of garlic, silver, and sunlight.
Patricia is the most stereotypical 'genki girl' of all characters. She loves anime and manga and has learned all her Japanese through them, leading to her having a very unusual Japanese vocabulary. She tends to make quite a few generalizations of Japan and Japanese culture based on otaku culture, even more so than her senior, Konata Izumi. She claims to enjoy a wide range of Japanese music, however the only artists she listens to are those who have performed anime theme songs, and only those songs alone.
In the film, he deputized the Skeletwins (Mickey and Monaco) to help him watch over Casper. Thatch displays vampiric traits, mostly his ability to shapeshift into a bat and having no reflection. Unlike most stereotypical vampires, all of his teeth are sharp and he seems to have no aversion to sunlight as he has been in Deedstown several times during the day. He apparently has acid for tears as he once cried for not having the respect of his gang, his tears burning holes through his cape.
The creator fully immersed himself in the process, participating in all stages and eventually directing the second season of the two made. Zaguri assembled the cast in what reviewer Na'amah Nagar perceived as a deliberate mocking of ethnic conventions. Some of the most stereotypical Moroccan characters were portrayed by European-descended actors. Vivienne was depicted by the Sara von Schwarze, her mother Alegria by Hava Ortman and the role of Mas'udah was played by Dvora Kedar-Halter, whose most recognized appearance on screen was that of the neurotic, Polish mother in Lemon Popsicle.
In 2011, Dorkly listed her as one of the most stereotypical Native American characters in fighting game history, ranking her at seventh place, tying with Michelle Chang, even as Beth Aileen Dillon of AbTeC (Aboriginal Territories in Cyberspace) called Julia "an interesting case" and appreciated "that she is educated and kicks ass."Beth Aileen Dillon, Reflecting on Indigenous Women in Video Games , AbTeC, May 5, 2010. Jeff Marchiafava of Game Informer included Jaycee among the "most ridiculous" characters of Tekken Tag Tournament 2.Jeff Marchiafava, The Most Ridiculous Characters Of Tekken Tag Tournament 2, GameInformer.
Upon discovering evidence that his brother may have been used in the construction of a Fulgore unit, he swears vengeance for the mutilation and begins eliminating Fulgores in a search for Eagle. He later frees Aganos from Ultratech's control, and the two form an alliance, working together to find both Eagle and Kan-Ra. In 2008, GamesRadar featured him on a list of top seven Native American stereotypes in games as one of three examples of the "Warrior" stereotype in fighting games.The Top 7... Native American stereotypes, GamesRadar US, 2008-11-24 In 2011, Dorkly ranked him the most stereotypical Native American character in fighting-game history.
The hierarchical structure of the memory system is a construct of elaborate categories that people create to classify objects. Instead of memory connections between all knowledge, we have connections between various concept nodes. According to Sherman's study, it shows that when given B object, people can form A object as B object provides relevant sample space that leads people to make judgement. For example, a person who is asked to retrieve a bird from memory thinks first of the concept node of all animals, then of all animals that can fly, and finally of a bird that is the most stereotypical of the class; for example, a robin.
As Robert Rushing defines it, peplum, "in its most stereotypical form, [...] depicts muscle-bound heroes (professional bodybuilders, athletes, wrestlers, or brawny actors) in mythological antiquity, fighting fantastic monsters and saving scantily clad beauties. Rather than lavish epics set in the classical world, they are low-budget films that focus on the hero's extraordinary body." Thus, most sword-and-sandal films featured a superhumanly strong man as the protagonist, such as Hercules, Samson, Goliath, Ursus or Italy's own popular folk hero Maciste. In addition, the plots typically involved two women vying for the affection of the bodybuilder hero: the good love interest (a damsel in distress needing rescue), and an evil femme fatale queen who sought to dominate the hero.
In 2011, Dorkly included Nightwolf among their selections of the seven most stereotypical Native American fighting-game characters. "Instead of carrying around actual axes, Nightwolf is so in touch with spirits and elders and, you know, energy, that he can form tomahawks out of green ectoplasm." Complex, in 2012, deemed Nightwolf the top stereotypical character in all video games, describing him as "the epitome of every red-skinned, feather- wearing sports mascot and old cowboy movie serial ... [he] has warpaint on his face, a feather in his hair and the sleeveless vest as if Geronimo himself just gave it up." David Wong of Cracked included Nightwolf as an example of an ethnically-stereotypical game character in a 2012 feature about racial prejudices in video game design.
He tends to aggravate the teachers with his overly complicated answers, and is frequently in trouble for disrupting class. Despite his intellect, he is shown to take most things too literally on occasion. (Once, when Roger asked him for "java", meaning a cup of coffee, Jason gave him a mug with a printout from the Java programming language.) He also once placed an order for a pizza with "17/51 cheese, 109/327 sausage, and 86,499,328/259,497,984 mushroom" (which resulted in Roger receiving all his change in pennies and telling Jason that his ever being asked to order their pizza again was an "unlikely event"), and unsuccessfully makes attempts to get Roger and Andy to raise his allowance, which almost always results in sudden, sharp decreases in his pay. Like most stereotypical boys, Jason is a constant source of mischief.
Morgan and Madge Kennedy in Baby Mine (1917) Morgan starred with John Barrymore in Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman (1917), an independent film produced in and about New York City. His career expanded when talkies began, his most stereotypical role being that of a befuddled but good hearted middle-aged man. By the mid-1930s, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer had been so impressed by Morgan that they signed him to a lifetime contract. Morgan is best remembered for his performance in The Wizard of Oz (1939) where he played the Wizard and five other roles: the carnival huckster "Professor Marvel", the gatekeeper at the Emerald City, the coachman of the carriage drawn by "The Horse of a Different Color", the Emerald City guard (who initially refuses to let Dorothy and her friends in to see the Wizard), and the Wizard's scary face projection. Morgan was cast in the role on September 22, 1938.
She prints the Academy's news scroll (which later leads her to be a reporter of the Kuzconian Times). She is a straight-A+ student, which is apparently a requirement for the cheerleading squad (a twist to most stereotypical "airheaded" cheerleaders). She is driven to excel almost to the point of having a nervous breakdown if she does not do everything perfectly perfect (a prime example of a Type A personality), and has a very moral mindset which the show uses as a foil against Kuzco's slacker life- choices. Malina also has an incredibly strong sense of winning every contest she enters by any means, which first appeared in the episode "The Emperor's New Tuber" in which Malina was determined to fill all the spots on the Whack- A-Weasel arcade game on the high score board with her name (the last person on the list was Yzma).
" At WhatCulture, gaming journalist Scott Tailford declared her as the worst character in Tekken 7, commenting "A character that almost feels designed to annoy the hardcore set, Lucky Chloe's aesthetic is already far too influenced by the most stereotypical of eastern tween anime, but in practice, her moveset just doesn't hold up either." Tailford also criticizes her Rage Art for being "incredibly cheap," due to her "sliding" under other characters before connecting. Gavin Jasper from Den of Geek sarcastically responded to her criticism by saying "Yes, it seems that a girl dressed as a cat just doesn’t fit in with a cast of such characters as a boxing kangaroo, a man made of wood, a robot teenage girl with chainsaw hands, and...whatever the hell Yoshimitsu is." Eddie Makuch of GameSpot was more neutral about her, stating "The Tekken series is known for its quirky characters, so Lucky Chloe's outlandish design isn't much of a surprise.

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