Sentences with phrase «about the kid who»

What about those kids who might have -LSB-...]
What about the kid who lined up at noon lunch break to get tickets to the Leafs, only to be beat by a bunch of thugs who lined up at 9 am, who later flips them to some investment banker?
It's hard because we are talking about kids who worked real hard and played real well.
You don't make a lot of friends dampening a conversation by saying, «Yeah, well what about the kid who just died of AIDS in Africa?»
Or how about that kids who screams like a baby piglet when they don't get their way in the store... seriously?
«We hear stories all the time about kids who won't drink milk other than what comes from our company because it tastes fresher to them.»
At one of the first team meetings his players raved about the kid who had just transferred in from nearby Santaluces High, after watching video clips of their new classmate.
He had heard about this kid who was an eighth - grade sensation, running around and through everybody on the peewee level.
That aside — probably the older players being a bit sniffy about a kid who had not put in the hard yards in the Premiership — but he played well for Arsenal at the start until the first of his many injuries to shoulders and thighs occurred.
All this being said about a kid who's been in England for 6 months and is just 21 - years - old.
Often times the school supply lists are long and I fret about kids who can't afford the required items.
Thank you to Sue Katz Miller for this roundup of books about kids who celebrate both Christmas and Hanukkah.
But what about the kids who's parents have different priorities?
This week I've fielded the same question from a few families and therapists who have emailed me about kids who do not initiate.
The Mother Company is hosting a twitter chat about kids who act mean or aggressively.
Parents, grandparents, godparents, do you know about The Kid Who?
They didn't make a fuss about kids who didn't use the potty (they did ask kids to tell them when they needed a change, though).
We spoke with Dr. Jason Youngman, a licensed psychologist in private practice in Miami, Fla., about kids who hate losing, and how parents and coaches can help a child learn from failure and disappointment that is an integral part of competing.
But youth sports is still really about the kids who play sports, with football having recognized worldwide appeal.
I am proud to be part of a group of people who care so much about kids who have had so much to persevere through early in their life.u
But let's be real about working moms while we're at it... you have a job to do while simultaneously wondering / worrying about your kids who are somewhere else all day and then come home to be hyper - vigilant all night.
and what about the kid who ate fruit loops for breakfast, a fruit roll up for snack and washed the cupcake down with gatorade?
Did you hear about the kid who charged thousands in App Store purchases on mom's phone while she thought he was playing Monkey Preschool Lunchbox?
But just looking at the major dietary sources of calcium, I worry about kids who stop drinking all milk after a flavored milk ban, yet still need a recommended 1300 mg of calcium a day.
(Of course I'm talking about kids who are active, thriving, happy kids).
What about the kids who are tossed out?
«I have one of 20 pages that I could read to you today about kids who have died in the state of Indiana.»
«It's easy to think about the kids who won't, but it's important to support the kids who do.»
OK, maybe that is a little overstated, but there is something quite remarkable about this kid who teaches me to love enthusiastically with an open heart, to be captivated by the wonder within every day, to play and laugh and sing and eat ice cream.
I can't know your whole story, but as a former teacher, it's hard for me to hear about a kid who isn't quite fitting into a parent's expectations.
Whenever you read about a kid who died within minutes of eating at a fast - food joint or after breathing in the peanut dust from a friend's candy wrapper, that's an «IgE - mediated» food allergy.
«You don't need to share about your kids who are ungrateful, your bankruptcy case from five years ago or your gout,» Palmer said.
So for example, Kerry Washington's company will produce Man Of The House, about a kid who has to figure out what being a man means in a houseful of only women.
Haigh says the saddest thing about «Leon on Pete» is that it's about a kid who has no one he can talk with, and when he finally opens up, it's to a horse that can't understand what he's saying.
«It's all about those little details, especially when it's about a kid who is going into a new environment.
That would be the otherwise tediously ordinary Jake Lawson (Gerard Butler), who headed the international team that designed the satellite system, popularly known as Dutchboy (after the fable about the kid who plugs a hole in a dike with his finger).
Director J.A. Bayona's lovely meditation on loss took me completely by surprise at a time when I was not exactly excited about seeing yet another film about a kid who befriends a computer - animated giant.
Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle is a sequel only in the sense that it's about some kids who get stuck inside a jungle game and have to finish it to get out.
A sci - fi allegory about a kid who may possess apocalyptic powers.
Well, there's a microbudgeted horror film about some kids who get into big supernatural trouble because they didn't follow the rules.
And yet it's also proof that capital - C comedy doesn't have to be as disposable as its studio counterparts; it spins the trend of the last few years on its head, and rather than following adults caught in arrested development, it's about kids who are racing prematurely to an adulthood that they're not quite ready for yet.
The extremely specific subgenre of magical - realist adventures about kids who cope with familial trauma by retreating into fantasy worlds full of monsters — see also: 2009's Where The Wild Things Are, 2016's A Monster Calls — gets a new entry in I Kill Giants, the debut feature from Danish filmmaker Anders Walter.
Most people remember it as a rock «n» roll flick about a kid who brings back dancing to an uptight Midwestern town where the local preacher has successfully had it banned.
It's about a kid who has an incurable disease who is accidently sent to the afterlife by a ghost hunter.
It is about a kid who didn't like black people.
David wondered about the kids who were dropping out of school, who were on the streets, and who were consigned to terrible alternative schools.
Some students socially transition at a young age and school records, including their «gender marker» — male, female — get updated, but what about kids who haven't started to transition or their records haven't been updated?
And are we talking about kids who are born into poverty, or spend most of their lives in poverty, or are in poverty for just a few years?
What about the kid who doesn't see the point or the purpose of sitting in a desk and doing assignments that have never motivated her in the past?
What about the kid who stands up, sometimes against his cool friends, to defend an outcast?
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