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16 Sentences With "nitpickers"

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

But nitpickers needn't worry: Plain climbed that one as well, just for safe measure.
" She also chastised "nitpickers," who "solely focus on every little slur and lie I say.
Nitpickers might ask why Kryptonians have British accents, including "Game of Thrones" alum Ian McElhinney as Seg's grandpa.
Nitpickers were out in full force after Apple reported earnings on Tuesday, which left Cramer perplexed as to why Wall Street is ignoring the company's service revenue stream.
Nitpickers were out in full force after Apple reported earnings on Tuesday, which left Jim Cramer perplexed as to why Wall Street is ignoring the company's service revenue stream.
Some nitpickers might note that Wentz's impressive NFL debut came against the lowly Browns, while a slightly less lowly team like the Bears is more apt to teach him a lesson.
" Then McCarthy, in a line we might expect to hear from President Trump himself one day, said, "It would be really great if the nitpickers could try to see the big picture and didn't solely focus on every little slur and lie I say.
At the same time, however, historians who have actually sought to separate fact from fiction in public venues have been derided as nitpickers who do not understand, or respect, the creative process, as if merely setting out where the play veers from the historical record were a presumptively hostile act.
One diplomat said that was a message aimed as much at Britain - where May's plans have come under heavy fire from within her ruling Conservative Party - as at the bloc's own "nitpickers" such as Spain or France, which has sought more assurances of future access to Britain's rich fishing waters.
Not all reviews were positive. Author Phil Farrand was critical of the episode, rating it his fourth least favorite episode of the first four seasons in his book The Nitpickers Guide to the X-Files.Farrand, p. 222 Entertainment Weekly gave "Grotesque" a D, labeling it as "ponderous, oblique, and featuring one of Mulder's always annoying, easy- way-out soliloquy summations".
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 32% of 57 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating was 4.84/10. Metacritic rated it 46/100 based on 10 reviews. Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club rated it B and called it a "minor but welcome return" for Landis. Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times described it as "a ghoulish comedy" not for nitpickers.
To do this, a Topi scouts out opening in the floor, runs back to its cave, and reemerges pushing an icicle to fill in two blocks. This process repeats until no more openings on their layer of ice exist. The Nitpicker is a small, mountain-dwelling bird that swoops down from icy caves on the levels' edges. Unlike the Topi, which is confined to one floor of the mountain, Nitpickers can cross over multiple ice layers.
Watching the episodes and movies of each series in order to compile each Guide took about seven months, leaving Farrand five months out of the year to learn how to write fiction.Message Board Message Although exhaustive in their attention to detail, the Guides were not intended as critiques of the series' episodes or movies, but lighthearted musings that Farrand explained with the philosophy, "All nitpickers shall perform their duties with lightheartedness and good cheer," explaining that nitpicking should be about having fun with one's favorite television shows, not pointing fingers and assigning blame.
The two applauded the episode's rich humor, as well as its exploration of extremely dark themes in a lighthearted way.Shearman and Pearson (2010), pp. 59–60. Shearman and Pearson concluded that "the troubled questions Morgan poses here" about free will and death "are best answered by the writing of the episode itself … an episode like this isn't random—it's finely wrought, and thoughtful, and compassionate, and is a triumph of individualism." Author Phil Farrand rated the episode as his third favorite episode of the first four seasons in his book The Nitpickers Guide to the X-Files.
A number of anachronisms and historical inaccuracies received attention, especially in the costumes and locations used."The White Queen brings zips, bricks and manicures to the 15th century", The Telegraph, 18 June 2013. Accessed 11 September 2013 Pat Stacey of the Irish Evening Herald, said that "the historical howlers are piling up like bodies on a battlefield, week after week", comparing it to the "flaws" spotted by "nitpickers" in Downton Abbey and Foyle's War."Off with the White Queen's head", Irish Evening Herald, 4 July 2013 Bernadette McNulty, of The Daily Telegraph, commented that in the final episode, the Battle of Bosworth Field appears to take place in a forest rather than a field.
He can slide down faster by holding only one vine, or climb faster by holding two. Enemies include "Snapjaws," which resemble bear traps with eyes; bird-like creatures called "Nitpickers," some of which can attack by dropping eggs; and "Sparks" which roam across the wiring in one of Mario's hideouts. DK Jr. can jump over these enemies while on platforms, switch from one vine/chain/rope to another to dodge them, and knock down pieces of fruit that will destroy every enemy they touch before falling off the bottom of the screen. To pass the first three stages, DK Jr. must reach the key hanging next to his father's cage, whereupon Mario flees while pushing the cage off the screen.

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