Sentences with phrase «by jabbering»

Ben doesn't shut up, of course, and there's some fun to be had watching Hart try to solve every problem on the street by jabbering at it.
Commentators get around to watching the films which they have been nagged beyond endurance to see by the jabbering chorus of critics and find themselves in no mood to go with the flow.

Not exact matches

It was still the best carnitas tacos I have ever made and the doubled recipe I made was more than halfway demolished by 2 adults and 3 jabbering teen girls, each of whom had 5 tacos.
And the way you beat a jabber is by jabbing.
► A woman carries a rifle down to a road on her farm where she sees a man wearing a biohazard - radiation suit and he shouts and cries for joy when he finds clean air; the woman follows the man to a pond beneath a waterfall and watches him, as he stands in it, bare from the waist up until he falls down, ill and jabbering nonsensically until she points a rifle at him, lowers it and he points a handgun at her and fires, missing her; the woman tells the man to get out of the radiation - contaminated water and he startles, climbs out and scans himself with a Geiger counter that clicks loud and fast as he spits water toward the camera followed by watery yellowish vomit and she helps him to his handcart on the road, where she administers an anti-radiation injection (please see the Substance Use category for more details).
By the same token, if you're someone who always prefers to show up in a jabbering throng at your local megaplex for tentpole movies on their first day — especially in IMAX — instead of arriving full of hope at small art houses, this list isn't for you, either.
is straight - up EPK stuff — ugly footage shot against ugly wallpaper, with Jarrold jabbering in between the appearances, on black - and - white title cards, of questions that were apparently being put to him by an off - camera interviewer.
In case you can't tell by my endless jibber - jabber, I'm really enjoying designing new characters.
My answer consisted of «an LLC stands for limited liability corporation,» which is wrong, followed by two pages of nonsensical jibber - jabber.
For example, a casual perusal of the online legal research service Westlaw reveals that «mumbo jumbo» appears at least 251 times in judicial opinions.8 «Jibber - jabber» shows up just seven times (although surprisingly used by parties, rather than in statements from the court), while the more prosaic «gobbledygook» has 126 hits in the legal database.9 Believed to have been coined in 1944 by U.S. Rep. Maury Maverick of Texas, «gobbledygook» has been used by everyone from political figures referring to bureaucratic doublespeak (for example, President Ronald Reagan's stinging 1985 indictment of tax law revisions as «cluttered with gobbledygook and loopholes designed for those with the power and influence to have high - priced legal and tax advisers») to judges decrying the indecipherable arguments and pleadings of the lawyers practicing before them.
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