Sentences with phrase «make pot shots»

They can make pot shots about the other's weight, thinning hair, bulbous nose, incompetencies, shortcomings or lack of sexual prowess without taking it personally.

Not exact matches

By the mid-1990s, when Oracle had effectively neutered its competition, Ellison had begun making a sport of taking pot shots at Microsoft and its founder Bill Gates, though both were, by most measures, entirely out of his league.
Fortunately, crack pots on either side of the extreme make it easy to shoot down their arguments, because they don't have many valid arguments.
Also, they were not my former pastor that I was choosing to take pot shots at in a public forum... Andrew was making threatening remarks.
Well, truly, I wouldn't leave you in the lurch like that, but after I made them it was dark outside, so I froze my pot - stickers to shoot on a better day.
Will give this a shot when I make a huge pot of tomato soup this week.
the thing is for that goal the defence did what they could do, tried to close down the shot, they had no gaps to make anything happen... it was a pot shot and the blame would have to go on Cech for that one... the only thing I could think that could have been done differently is Gabriel taking out Adebayor earlier
When you got a 4th liner potting shots like that it makes things really difficult on your opponent.
The blind tee shot, the road lining the fairway and the deathly pot bunker that guards the green all make sure the Road Hole will be a nightmare for almost every player this week.
For once a referee's poor decision - making did not cost us three points and if the winner was controversial because of an alleged handball by Sam Vokes, then it was no more than Burnley deserved on the night, having peppered the Leicester goal with 24 shots, had 60 % of the possession, and had a nailed on penalty claim (maybe two) ignored in the first half, Mike Dean showing again that with him it is pot luck whether or not any team is awarded a penalty.
Recently, Mr Hain took a pot shot at the US government, saying it was the most right - wing administration in Washington «in living memory» and noting this had made relations with a Labour government in London difficult over the years.
This baby makes rich, classic coffee by the pot or cup, concentrated espresso shots, even iced coffee.
But it's sort of their shot at a foul - mouthed pot - sex - bodily - functions - Judd Apatow - style comedy and as such seems watered down, with just a hint of the British eccentricity that made them cult heroes.
- split up into three waves - each wave gives the team a quota of eggs to collect, as well as a time limit - goal is to defeat enemies, causing them to drop eggs - haul those eggs back to the basket - if you meet your quota (and you're still alive) when time expires, all remaining enemies retreat and you move on - when you start out, the difficulty can be set to 5 % out of a possible 100 % - heavy Salmonids have armor in the front, so you have to him them in the back - when Inklings take too much damage in Salmon Run, they can be revived by a teammate shooting them with ink - another boss character is a tall, slender creature that approaches from the shoreline - this boss is made up off pots, which you have to shoot to make disappear - another boss is a massive metal eel that rains down ink - the eel is piloted by a Salmonid creature, which you have to take out to stop the eel - another boss has two trashcans attached to the side of it, and it hovers over the battlefield, - a trashcan opens and it rains down blobs of ink onto you - you can take him out by tossing bombs into the open trashcans - Nintendo says that 40 % difficulty is the highest difficulty people on the Nintendo E3 team could beat.
The price also goes against it — in quite a big way actually — as any quick shooting party title needs to be tempting enough for a group of mates to chuck a quid or two into a pot, in order for a purchase to be made.
Defenders have a lot of cover in and around the bomb points which makes it easy for them to take pot shots at anyone moving in and then move back into cover to heal up.
But Ros Reines» column in The Sunday Telegraph, taking pot - shots at wicked Liz, made me cross.
I did a class last week where we made little chocolate pots, and I pulled out six different things you could put them in, from an espresso shot glass, to a sherry glass, to a votive candle holder — as long as you didn't use it for candles.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z