Sentences with phrase «pretty big trouble»

If you are carrying unsecured debt totaling more than half of your annual salary, you're in pretty big trouble.

Not exact matches

They're pretty big (yes, you really do bake 12 on a rimmed cookie sheet) but none of us has had trouble eating them.
The trouble with milk substitutes in baking is the lack of eight main allergen - free options if (and this is a pretty big if) you have a coconut problem.
If there's fog, you'll be in trouble,» or, «You can expect some pretty big seas here.»
The Magpies are in big trouble here and a game on the south coast against Southampton, who are generally pretty reliable at home, doesn't appear to offer them any chance of working their way out of their relegation problems.
While I absolutely love the formula and the colors, I prefer to use a pretty big blush brush and I have trouble making sure I don't end up dipping my brush into several shades at once.
The driver was so startled he or she presumed the car's steering was more powerful than it really was, or someone pretty clever has developed an amazing hack and we're in bigger trouble than we thought.
And while adding up each and every deduction can be rather time - consuming, one pretty accurate way to determine if you need to go through the trouble is to just look at what I call the «big three» itemized deductions.
This makes sense, as cats in the wild will hunt rabbits and large rodents and have no trouble making a meal out of a pretty big whole animal.
The puzzles, on the whole, are pretty lame, far too easy and uninspired, coupled with a combination of the previous two complaints they can lead to cheap deaths which seem to serve only to address the biggest problem with «Dante's», the fact that it's just far too short, a play through on the normal difficulty setting can be done without much trouble in around 6 hours and with no achievements for completing the game on harder difficulties, there's little incentive for doing it again.
The trouble is that while there are plenty of weather stations on land, there are some pretty big gaps over the oceans, the polar regions, and even parts of Africa and South America.
That sounds finite, a bit resolute, but it's a lot like law school — if you're ahead, you're pretty much on time, and if you're behind you're in big trouble
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