Sentences with phrase «dwindling band»

The phrase "dwindling band" refers to a small group of people that is slowly getting smaller in number. Full definition
The rest of this post is for the dwindling band of citizens who adhere to the quaint notion that politics should be about policies.
That means they are unintimidated by secular France and do not feel the need to acquiesce to the dwindling band of progressive Catholics and their views about how practicing Catholics and the Church should behave.
We realistic fans, which excludes you and your dwindling band of AKB's, have known for ages, that removing Wenger is overwhelmingly important, to improve us.
Nick Clegg and his dwindling band of supporters have been stuck on around 10 per cent of the vote for as long as anyone can remember.
The dwindling band around Cameron is a worry, whatever anyone in No 10 says.
By the next election, the dwindling band of Conservatives with ministerial experience will be almost as small - kicking out older members, people who've been around for a bit, is NOT going to help.
A lame comic tribute to the dwindling band of «Star Wars» aficionados, is one of those be nighted projects whose back story turns out to be significantly more compelling than the movie itself.
Loosely based on a true story and set in New York at the cusp of the 1960s and»70s, American Gangster is written by Steven Zaillian and directed by Ridley Scott, one among a dwindling band of filmmakers who can call upon the vast resources of Hollywood cinema for meaningful, character - driven stories.
«FANBOYS,» a lame comic tribute to the dwindling band of «Star Wars» aficionados, is one of those be nighted projects whose back story turns out to be significantly more compelling than the movie itself.
And it's Happy Birthday to STT: Boxing Day 2017 marks 5 years of giving an embattled wind industry and its dwindling band of parasites and spruikers hell.
Australia's dwindling band of wind industry spruikers keep telling us that the answer to cheaper power prices is out there blowin» in the wind.
Among the dwindling band of deluded wind and sun worshippers, no two words are more prone to send them into apoplexy than «South Australia».
They mostly slept on people's floors — they got one hotel room for $ 60, which came out of their dwindling band fund.
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