Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

31 Sentences With "wriggly"

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

The woman splashed tap water into her eye, and a "wriggly" .
That would certainly be easier than dealing with millions of wriggly caterpillars.
Things are a little loose, and wriggly and jiggly & a little uncertain.
Things are a little loose, and wriggly and jiggly & a little uncertain.
They're not overdone, like sharks or snakes, but they're no less wriggly and disgusting.
There are also cutters -- like cookie cutters -- to make wriggly animals and sky-related shapes.
One Twitter user joined all of the videos' images together to show that they form one big, wriggly reptile.
And the baby was so wriggly and minuscule that the basket she was found in looked empty at first glance.
Vaginas are like self-cleaning ovens; an octopus's wriggly appendages are called arms not tentacles; and there's no biological basis for race.
The industrialized stomp is fully present, but still couched in grimy, wriggly proto-black metal riffs that pummel and churn with abandon.
My hungry, wriggly nine-month-old son's screaming frustration was a good representation of how plenty of parents must feel when using these.
Best for: Preschool-age Prefontaines The keychain-sized Jiobit is the easiest tracker to clip to a wriggly kid's belt loop, shoelace, or backpack.
The whole suicide thing is a logical extension of that stance, framed here as impenetrable and un-American as a wriggly piece of ebi.
After seeing a group of children playing with a worm, Kate approached them and said, "Wow, he's super wriggly!" of the slimy, sliding worm.
He did his customary wriggly dance moves: Jaggerish swivels and poses that come off as (and actually seem to be) both ironic and sincere.
Purplish, wriggly and the size of a pinkie fingernail clipping, Antarctic midge larvae live for nearly two years underground, often near penguin and seal excrement.
While the cover image evokes a wriggly, soft-bellied pet, the later image depicts a blob-like, nearly monstrous form — not threatening, but estranged and looming.
He is governing in the fashion in which he has lived his life, like an over-eager puppy who is all wriggly, attention-seeking, impulsive, prone to mistakes and clumsy to clean up.
While convincing people in Western nations to eat wriggly worms instead of juicy steaks would be an enormous challenge, using insect protein to feed animals instead of soy and fish may not be that hard.
No one having an MRI scan is supposed to experience more than 99 decibels but these machines can easily go above that, especially if you're trying to scan a wriggly and sensitive baby as quickly as possible.
This undignified incident is just the latest in a long (and wriggly) line of eel invasions to strike the Hawaiian monk seals -- a phenomenon that was first spotted in the summer of 2016 off Hawaii's Lisianski Island.
He rowed back a little the next day, conceding that he might have misspoken, that there was interference in 2016 -- but in a wriggly, unconvincing tone that implies he knows he's made a poor judgment but won't confront it honestly (something about saying "would" when he meant "wouldn't").
During the years of my ultimately failed relationships, my younger sister gave birth to two beautiful boys, nephews I held in my arms only minutes after they'd emerged from her body, the first child full-lipped and wriggly, the second saucer-eyed and long-lashed like my sister, a little round hunk of sweetness.
Equally drawn to vernacular imagery, Jim Falconer's canvasses are crowded with floppy, wriggly forms adapted from popular sources: "Morbid Sunshine by a Miner Artist" (1966), for example, features a central figure in bright yellow and a black top hat, looking like a wobbly version of the Planter's company's Mr. Peanut, surrounded by similarly cartoonish forms.
These stories were broadcast on the Listen with Mother programmes throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. Listening Corner, which replaced Listen with Mother on 10 September 1982, began with repeats of the Wriggly Worm stories. Collections of Listen with Mother stories have been published by Hutchinsons/Random House. Two collections of Wriggly Worm stories ('Wonderful Wriggly Worm' and 'Wonderful Wriggly Worm Rides Again'), by Eugenie Summerfield, have been published by Book Guild.
Gottlieb once said, "If I made a wriggly line or a serpentine line it was because I wanted a serpentine line. Afterwards it would suggest a snake but when I made it, it did not suggest anything. It was purely shape... ". These lines and shapes that Gottlieb used were easily interpreted to mean different things by different people.
Based on statistics, the twins were given a 20 percent chance of survival at birth. At birth at B.C. Women's Hospital & Health Centre, they were described as "wriggly, vigorous and very vocal."Statement from BC Women's regarding Felicia Simms delivery ., News release, BC Women's Hospital & Health Centre, October 25, 2006 They weighed 12 and a half poundsThe Twins Who Share a Brain when they were born by caesarean section.
It was first broadcast on the BBC Light Programme in a fifteen-minute slot every weekday afternoon at 1.45, just before Woman's Hour. Consisting of stories, songs and nursery rhymes (often sung by Eileen Browne and George Dixon) for “mothers and children at home”, at its peak it had an audience of more than a million listeners. From 7 September 1964 the programme moved to the BBC Home Service (later BBC Radio 4). Listen with Mothers final week's programmes (widely reported in the press) featured Wriggly Worm stories, presented by Nerys Hughes and Tony Aitken and directed by David Bell.
These magazines featured masturbation, sexual penetration, lesbianism and homosexuality, group sex and fetishes. Hardcore magazines are typically sold in sex shops or by mail order because UK law does not allow hardcore R18 certificate imagery to be sold at newsagents' shops. British softcore pornography magazines can be found in newsagents' shops and petrol stations where they are generally kept on the top shelf of the display, leading to their popular name of "top-shelf magazines". The market supports a growing number of specialist magazines whose titles indicate their contents: 40 Plus, Fat and 40, Skinny and Wriggly and Leg Love.
" Peter Rainer of New York magazine liked the script, also stating "The animation, directed by Andrew Adamson and Vicky Jenson, is often on the same wriggly, giggly level as the script, although the more "human" characters, such as Princess Fiona and Lord Farquaad, are less interesting than the animals and creatures—a common pitfall in animated films of all types." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote "Shrek is a world-class charmer that could even seduce the Academy when it hands out the first official animation Oscar next year." James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying "Shrek is not a guilty pleasure for sophisticated movie- goers; it is, purely and simply, a pleasure." Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times wrote "The witty, fractured fairy tale Shrek has a solid base of clever writing.
Corrugated galvanised iron roofing in Mount Lawley, Western Australia A corrugated iron church (or tin tabernacle) in Kilburn, London Typical corrugated galvanised iron appearance, with visible large flake type patterns. The galvanised sheet is viewed from below and is supported by a piece of angle iron (painted white). Corrugated galvanised iron or steel (colloquially corrugated iron (near universal), wriggly tin (taken from UK military slang), pailing (in Caribbean English), corrugated sheet metal (in North America) and occasionally abbreviated CGI) is a building material composed of sheets of hot-dip galvanised mild steel, cold-rolled to produce a linear corrugated pattern in them. Although it is still popularly called "iron" in the UK, the material used is actually steel (which is iron alloyed with carbon for strength, commonly 0.3% carbon), and only the surviving vintage sheets may actually be made up of 100% iron.

No results under this filter, show 31 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.