Sentences with phrase «more cliche»

One more cliche, but there is truth to it — when you are out of work, looking for a new job is your job.
And speaking of churning out cliches... can you get more cliche than patpong road thai hooker stories when discussing the «other side» of thailand?
While Sutter's screenplay doesn't necessarily add anything new to the genre, what it does is take some of the more cliche aspects and gives them an interesting twist, injecting them with enough new life to avoid the pitfalls of mediocrity.
There is nothing more cliche about Valentine's Day than single women complaining they don't have a date.
I'm funny, Out going... (more cliche» words) I love meeting new people so if you want to talk, hit me up.
The burlap and cotton embody the south in a lovely way while avoiding the more cliche -LSB-...]
Most Talked - About: Christian Piatt with «Ten Cliches Christians Should Never Use» (See also «Ten More Cliches Christians Should Avoid» and «Ten Antidotes to Christian Cliches»)
Singles do nt need more cliches and platitudes.
I don't think they could fit any more cliches or predictable story lines than they did in Dexter's final season.
There's no tension, no forward narrative, more cliches than a Roland Emmerich film, no proper establishing of scenes or the geometry of said scene so you can work out where everyone is and what needs doing and some piss poor acting.

Not exact matches

It may be a cliche, but a picture really can tell a story that much more effectively.
Forget the specifics, for a paragraph, because this is a notable development: while these hearings usually devolve into partisan cliches with the same talking points — Democrats want regulations, and Republicans don't — yesterday Senators from both sides of the aisle expressed unease with Facebook's handling of private data; obviously Democrats tried to tie the issue to the last election, but that made the Republicans» shared concern all - the - more striking.
These are more than cliche - swaggering words to me, this is the raw begging in my veins: I have done things I would rather die a thousand deaths than for even one person to ever know.
Your cliches are getting more predictable.
It would be nice if some pastor, some where in the US, would be willing to equip the Saints and help them get to know God more instead of instilling guilt because they're not doing enough and when they ask for the pastor to lay off the hackneyed cliches even once in a while, they get something other than «knowledge puffs up, but love edifies.»
They already know all the cliches and they don't want to be preached at or given tips on how to be more spiritual in the midst of their pain.
If the Christian church has something helpful to say to the present, complex economic world, how can it put together needed words and ideas that are more than cliches?
Things get more interesting when he adds two further «relativizations» of the Luther cliche.
Brigitte, to paraphrase one comedian's remark about Bill Clinton's cigar, «sometimes a [cliche] is more than a [cliche].»
These statements are little more than Christian cliches, and aside from not helping anybody, they do not accurately represent God or Scripture.
Your cavalier use of the cliche «they just don't get it,» only serves as more fuel for anti-Catholic bigotry that seeks to minimize Catholic teachings such as the ministerial priesthood, same - sex marriage and abortion.
Doing a long series of arithmetical calculations or working all day entering data at a computer terminal may result in almost total «an - aesthesia,» while proving a new mathematical theorem or writing a complex computer program may bring about intense involvement and the enjoyment of vivid immediate experience.8 «Aesthetic» experience in the more usual sense of tile term can also y ~ ry fi - om trivial to highly intense, even when it relates to a single object; one is reminded of the cliche situation in which one member of a couple listens in rapture to a concert while the other writhes in boredom.
Its nice to smile and make Christians feel like they're rebellious by following a «dirty God,» but this is nothing more than surface - level, cliche - ridden empty rhetoric.
God, could you idiots get a little more f - u-c-k-i-n-g cliche'd?
The more fundamentalist a church gets the more it becomes a mere propaganda machine holding to cliches like «be in the world not of it», «love the sinner, hate the sin», and «you don't understand because you don't have faith».
I know it sounds cliche, but I'm completely committed to doing things that make me happy this year, including (watch how I connect this) eating more Mexican food.
Panoxyl8 you can get over the counter at the pharmacy its really strong and it dried out my face... and this is going to sound cliche but proactive it the only thing that has balanced my face, and eating more which isss definitely not a problem ha.
It may sound cliche, but «less is more» and «what you see is what you get» are perfectly descriptive of this clean and refreshing salad.
I also want to eat better and exercise more (cliche, much?)
You often hear the old football cliche that managers and players learn more from a defeat or a tough game than an easy win and if this is the case then Chambers should have learned a hell of a lot on Monday.
It's an old cliche I know, but the more you repeat somethng, the more likely it is to be true, but I really do believe that this BELIEF is rubbing off on the fans as well.
These guys have sacrificed so much to get this far the cliche, «who wants it more...», makes no sense.
I still think there will be a few more out going and iwill not be surprised if we get to the end of the window with only Myk signed and a bag full of Wenger cliches of we tried.
Unless you mean «Let's take one game at a time» more in a football cliche kind of way.
The easy cliche here would be to say that this trade was more about business than basketball, and that it's all part of the Thunder growing up.
I could lean with some more hipster options, too, but I am going mainstream and cliche and saying Phil Mickelson.
The January transfer window has expanded one of football's more enduring cliches, and it's now a season of two halves.
our managers stubborness and reluctance to spend seems to have our fans split right down the middle... i genuinely believe its not the fact that he thinks the squad is good enough its more that hes trying to prove that you do nt need to buy success and by god if it takes him 10 years for this bunch to mature enough to do it hel keep us suffering so he can turn and say «told ya so» to fergie, rafa, hughes, abramovich, etc.the problem is by the time this happens theyl have won titles by spending the question is are all you fans on the other side of the argument willing to wait that long and watch cesc, RvP, arshavin, cliche etc go elsewhere for momentos of their careers.in the time since our last league triumph (also last serious challenge) the team that has won the league most has invested in berbatov, nani, evra, vidic, carrick, hargreaves, anderson, tevez to name a few....
... takes two to tango... first look at «yourself» in the mirror... just cliches... they say... I was married to my first wife for 17 1/2 years... she always thought grass was greener on the other side... after I left, she went on to relationship after relationship, married and divorced twice more... I feel sorry for her... forever searching... never finding... I was married once... maybe enough for me...
It's an empty cliche that strategically keeps women in the home through the sly insistence that motherhood is much more valuable than any job that women could have in the public sphere.»
It might sound cliche, but your partner will appreciate it more than you think.
It has become a cliche to repeat the observation made by former General Secretary Morgan Phillips, that Labour «owed more to Methodism than Marxism».
Aside from the cliches that it all comes down to turnout and that the only poll that counts is the one on Election Day, one more truism that talking heads will repeat endlessly Tuesday is that demographics are destiny.
It's more than a cliche.
You've undoubtedly heard that you have to «eat big to get big,» but vague cliches like these raise more questions than they provide answers.
It sounds cliche» but after being with someone for almost 23 years, it gets more and more important to focus on showing that same love each and every day.
It might sound like a cliche, but think about how many more amazing outfits you can make when you have pieces that go together a million ways!
The cliche about Parisians and navy is so true in my experience — I see it almost as much as black, it's just as chic of a color, and slightly more «unexpected».
But every cliche in the book couldn't be more true.
It sounds cliche, but less is more....
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