For instance, I've seen American preachers get so frustrated because we listen to sermons instead of
hollering back.
«Try throwing your nets on the other side of the boat» the man
hollers back.
Joe Becker, Dodger coach,
hollered back, «Use the same things you did yesterday.»
Jump into the Preview and feel free to
holler back with your own predictions on any of our social media channels.
If you are interested, just holler, maybe I'll
holler back.
I love the use of animated cutaways, not the least the movie's title cards, which
holler back to masterpieces of the Japanese New Wave.
And his partner
hollers back, «I can't swim!»
Not exact matches
There was a pause; then someone in the
back hollered, «How old are you anyhow?»
What about that time we fell apart in the second half at South Carolina, went straight to the locker room when we got
back the next day and had to put on those smelly uniforms that had been locked in the trunk all night, and Pat
hollered, «Now you're going to play the half you didn't play last night!»
Defensive end Charles Haley cratered a wall with his helmet and, while walking near the locker of Smith's replacement, running
back Derrick Lassie,
hollered, «We're never going to win with this rookie running
back!»
holler of an alarm, when I pulled the glasses down from the top of my head and onto my face and saw all the goats, and all the sheep... just about on the
back steps of the house.
His soft whimpers turn to
hollers when she doesn't come right
back.
She rarely wakes in the night — mostly STTN, occasionally something makes her
holler briefly (I think she's been teething lately) but she goes right
back to sleep.
I would just
holler up to get
back in bed and my boys all thought I was some kind of magic, all - seeing wizard for a few nights.
well I'm chilled laid
back 5» 6 long dark brown hair dark brown eyes I'm sophisticated and well built young hard working ambitious I have a great sense of humor anything else just
holler at me
I think im pretty kick
back, if u wan na know more just
holler at me;)
Worst of all, the play - to - the -
back - of - the house overacting and
hollering of lines that may work onstage, especially from Sophie's bridesmaid pals, borders on painful on the big screen.
They
holler for each other at the top of their lungs for no real reason, they take turns spitting on cars from the second floor because why not, they sass
back at the adults that yell at them, they run away, the stomp through fields and make trouble and are generally exactly the kind of little monsters kids usually are.
When Jacob smirks while being
hollered at by the program's big boss, he's reminded that he's lucky to be able to go
back to his home every night, unlike the kids on the other side of the fence.
When «Lady Bird» writer - director Greta Gerwig and star Saoirse Ronan took the stage in the Golden Globes press room, they sparked a rowdy round of congratulatory hooting and
hollering — to which they responded by hooting and
hollering right
back, clutching their award statuettes.
And if I'd closed my eyes I could've seen what the building had been forty or fifty years before that,
back when I was a young woman: a screen door slamming shut, oil lamps lit and sputtering black smoke, dusty horses hitched to the posts out front where the iceman unloaded every Wednesday afternoon, the last stop on his route before he headed up out of the
holler, the bed of his truck an inch deep with cold water.
The peacocks tilted their heads
back and bellowed and
hollered their desires into the night.
Their chat was unavailable on a Sunday night and the call -
back person never called
back, so I
hollered on Twitter the next morning and the @kobohelp person eventually refunded my purchase price
back on my credit card and then gave me an additional $ 15 store credit on my Kobo account to make up for the trouble.
I
hollered to the fireman that there was a
back door around the corner of the building.
The Gunstringer spins a familiar yarn — a double - crossed outlaw is
back from the grave and out for revenge — but the conceit that it's all a play (complete with cuts to a live audience whooping and
hollering a victory or booing the introduction of a corrupt banker) works brilliantly, and it's impossible to participate without a grin mysteriously emerging where a player's game - face scowl normally resides.
Have you read what some of the people around here have said about scientists like Jim Hansen, Michael Mann, Gavin Schmidt, and others?!? I hardly think that my noting a particular recent instance regarding one of Lindzen's recent scientific claims and suggesting that one might want to actually have evidence to
back up the claim constitutes «abuse» or «smear» or «
holler [ing]».