Sentences with phrase «like valley girls»

It was an elite boarding school, where cheerleaders were practicing inside the compound, students were instructed in carriage - driving education, a few stoners emerged from a medieval style VW - van, and two females were speaking «totally» like Valley Girls.
because we all talk like Valley Girls.
Sorry for sounding like a valley girl, but I am from California:).
When Danes says, «I'd do anything to get you humans out of my forest,» she sounds like a Valley Girl peeved over lack of parking spaces at the mall.

Not exact matches

That's on top of our overuse of «likeValley - Girl talk, and the higher register of the female voice.
She sounds like a teenage Valley Girl.
«When Success Leads to Failure,» The Atlantic «The Gift of Failure,» New York Times «If Your Kid Left His Term Paper At Home, Don't Bring It To Him» New York Magazine «Books That Changed My Mind This Year,» Fortune «New Book Suggests Parents Learn to Let Kids Fail,» USA Today «7 Rules for Raising Self - Reliant Children,» Forbes «Before You Let Your Child Fail, Read This,» Huffington Post «How Schools Are Handling an Overparenting Crisis,» NPR «Why Failure Hits Girls So Hard,» Time «The Value of a Mess,» Slate «4 Reasons Why Every Educator Should Read «The Gift of Failure,»» Inside Higher Ed «Why We Should Let Our Children Fail,» The Guardian (UK) «Shelly's Bookworms: The Gift of Failure,» WFAA Dallas «Why I Don't Want My Kids to be Lazy Like Me,» Yahoo Parenting «Jessica Lahey,» Celia Walden for The Telegraph (UK) «How to To Give Your Child The Gift of Failure,» Huffington Post «The Gift of Failure,» Doug Fabrizio, Radio West «In the Author's Voice: The Gift of Failure,» WISU / NPR «The Gift of Failure,» The Good Life Project «Giving Our Children the Gift of Failure,» ScaryMommy «Lyme Resident's Book Challenges Parents and Kids on Failure,» Valley News «The Gift of Failure,» The Jewish Press
We usually work pretty late into the evenings, but we'll take a break to grab dinner with the kids around 7 p.m. and tuck them into bed around 10 p.m. Josh and I need some time to unwind in the evenings and NOT talk about work, so we'll catch up on our favorite shows like Shark Tank, Silicon Valley, or Girls.
Though there may not be as much pomp and circumstance about HBO's comedy series Doll & Em as there is surrounding Game of Thrones or the cable network's other comedy series like Silicon Valley and Veep, the show starring Emily Mortimer (The Newsroom) and Dolly Wells (Some Girls) has enough of a following and acclaim for a second season coming in September.
Regina and Samantha are fun to watch, and not quite a complete stereotype of Valley girls like other «totally 80s» movies at the time.
The 1988 horror yarn Waxwork ends with a band of hunters — including Valley Girl's Deborah Foreman and Gremlins star Zach Galligan — facing off against a slew of vampires, werewolves, mummies, zombies, even an Audrey II - like man - eating plant in a wax museum - set battle royale over the fate of mankind.
Slow, not terribly interested in lore or internal logic, and fatally hamstrung by the choice of actors like Billy Crystal and a zombified Emily Mortimer to voice its American dub, it's a regression for Miyazaki from his last two films (Princess Mononoke and Spirited Away) in almost every sense, starting with his decision to have a lonely young woman as the central character in place of the prepubescent little girls front and centre in most of his masterpieces (the last two films, Kiki's Delivery Service, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, and My Neighbor Totoro) and ending with a gross simplification of his usually complex themes of confidence and actualization into a colourless, flavourless drone about the hard - to - dispute badness of war.
Luckily for these two rockers who say «dude» almost as often as a California valley girl utters «like», intergalactic assistance in the form of Rufus (George Carlin) is on the way.
One teacher and coach from the San Ramon Valley Unified School District in the Bay Area was contrite after being accused of leering at teenage swimmers, making sexually charged remarks to students and instructing girls to «bark like seals» while they did push - ups.
The girl, possessed of a preternatural cool and moving with the slow, deliberate gestures of a robot from the uncanny valley, explains that, for whatever reason, the artists decided to bring her to life, and she asks members of the audience to explain what it's like to be human (posing stumpers like, «What is the relationship between a sign and melancholia?»).
It, like, doesn't matter,» said Ellison, lapsing from mock sincerity to valley girl so quickly it won a big laugh from the audience.
For those of us who aren't valley girls like you, your smileys impede communication.
It's Eli Rabett, the guy who writes in the affected 3rd person voice, like an insufferable valley girl.
Like, please like don't go all, like, valley girl onLike, please like don't go all, like, valley girl onlike don't go all, like, valley girl onlike, valley girl on us.
I had included the address so XXXXQuail Valley Drive, XXXXXXXXX Ontario, Owners (via cross reference) Mr XXXX and Mrs. XXXX, Age Mid to Late 30 ′ s Phone number 905XXXXXXX 2 children Boy 8 - 10 - plays soccer and lacrosse, favorite color blue, plays piano Girl 11 - 13 - plays soccer and ringette, favorite color yellow, likes unicorns, has ipod and cell phone Family is Catholic He has post secondary education He attended Queens He is an engineer He may have a motorcycle (this was correct too) They purchase foreign brand cars She is Stay at Home Mom She has post secondary education She has some degree She is over weight and trying to lose it She Scrap books She uses the internet regularly She uses a Mac He uses a PC They have a small dog (probably female)(correct again) The dog does not jump up on doors They use Royal Bank They vacation South in Winter (Mexico regular place) They prefer neutral colors She still likes dolls They prefer Sony products and Apple They have an alarm system The alarm is based on motion sensors The windows have no contact sensors The side door is often unlocked The patio doors have no security bars The Basement windows have no curtains The rear yard is accessible from the back They use their hot tub regularly They are not the original owners They drink red wine They drink bottled water They own 2 vehicles She comes from a big family.
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