Sentences with phrase «hardly see his face»

She could hardly see his face between his green cap and full beard.

Not exact matches

Now, puberty does cruel things to a child — most of us would be best served by serving in camera - free prison camps between the ages of 10 and 14 — and Lino Facioli (the actor playing Robin) is hardly the only hormonal disaster on the show (see also: Stark, Bran), but at least his wiener teen face serves his dainty, dim - witted character.
After a tough week which saw Arsene Wenger pick a strong Arsenal side to face Basel in Switzerland on Wednesday and with a Premier League match away to Everton coming up on Tuesday, the boss could hardly have asked for a better fixture for this weekend.
I see many are getting impatient with ozil and want him to be more up and in the opponent face but he's hardly that type.
Whenever we are playing against a big team in EPL, I hardly see a smile on people's faces.
There's hardly a single non-white face to be seen in the pictures of the event.
Regardless of whether they thought they would meet the people in the scene, when participants thought they were watching a live webcam they seemed to avoid looking at the faces of the people and hardly followed their direction of gaze at all even though the people in the scene could not see the participants.
I could hardly wait to see how it would do with my mascara — I always struggle to get the last bits of mascara off — and I wear a pretty healthy heap of makeup that I like to remove before washing my face with my CeraVe cleanser at night.
It wasn't until after the film when I saw her face lit up that she told me she'd been so busy that she had hardly listened to them.
It's so small that my brush hardly picked up any color... so all you really see on my face is my blush.
He was a good looking guy and the primary photo was so dark, you could hardly see his sweet face.
But that hardly matters; because after so many films these faces become embedded in a world we have seen unfold across a decade's worth of cinema.
Blooper specials of stars flubbing their lines and stumbling over props have trivialized the impact of outtakes — seeing makeup applied to the president's face hardly demystifies the oval office.
Sure, I could name some fresher faces I'd be more psyched to see (many of them female: Julia Loktev, Maren Ade, Ursula Meier, Debra Granik, Nina Paley), but hitting us baby one more time with some of world cinema's giants hardly constitutes timidity.
But there is hardly a black face to be seen here, barely a caricature, and no examination of such difficult issues as the slave trade or the oppression of Ireland or the social horror of the early Industrial Revolution.
Conversely, faced with Postmodernism's culture of images celebrated by Jean Baudrillard, one hardly knows at times whether to see a critique of capitalism or a trembling before the apocalypse.
You can hardly see it when the watch face is off, and when it's on it disappears in the glow of the screen.
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