Sentences with phrase «quite remember that name»

It's that nice guy at a party with a perfectly boring job and a pleasant disposition — nice enough, easy to get along with, with decent conversation and no awkwardness, but you'll never quite remember his name.
TW: I can't quite remember his name.
Can't quite remember that name of that famous holiday favorite?
I can't quite remember its name (help me -LSB-...]
I can't quite remember its name (help me out here Mon / Megz... I'd ask Mum, but she's on yet another cruise).

Not exact matches

The perfect judge would have to apply an infinitely complex law, so that each person under the law would be held to a standard that is individually tailored to his situation: «Anyone who was born on May 23 at 2:53 p.m. at 1128 Main St. and whose first sight was of a quite pretty nurse named Amy whose hands were slightly cold...» and so on, telling the exact story of your life in literally every detail, ``... any such person ought to have been able to control his temper upon discovering that the morning newspaper was wet from the rain, but could not be expected to remember to buy a card for his sister's sixteenth birthday.»
Perhaps Arsenal have someone coming through the youth teams they seem to be throwing up quite a few gems at present, cant remember the names but I've seen two youngsters that are future DMs.
If Davis» name rings a bell with you and you can't quite remember why, it's probably because of something that happened to him while he was a player at Indiana.
Quite sad after starting the season in a decent matter and we had high hopes of the premier league... I remember some pundits on skysports predicted that Arsenal will win the league (can't remember his name) but He wanted Arsenal to win it real bad....
There was no limit to the length of time he could spend connecting Thomas, Henry, and James, plus nine others whose names I never could quite remember.
They have many thousands of key combinations for words and names to remember, and a slip of a finger can result in something that sounds like, but isn't quite, what was said.
I had no idea who Pål Sverre Hagen, and even though I just had to copy / paste that name again because there's no way I'll remember it, he made a great leading family man type and his kids in the movie were also quite good.
Allowing his name, persona, and «image» (though one of the movie's great running jokes is that nobody can quite remember who he is) to be utilized in this bizarre, absurdist fashion required a great leap of faith, especially since both Kaufman and director Spike Jonze were relative nobodies at the time.
As you can see by this adoring review of Alinsky's work, the NEA writer is so blindly in love with his subject that he can't quite remember from sentence to sentence how to spell his hero's name.
I can't quite remember why, except that it suited him better than his real name, which is Ambrose, of all things!
Nesser's name looked familiar to me when I first saw the advance reader's copy of Borkmann's Point, but I couldn't quite remember why.
I wish I could remember the author's name of a blog post I read quite a while ago that outlined everything that makes Hugh's writing so stellar without giving away any of the story.
I recall meeting a dog several years back named «Iggy Von Bacon Bits III» and to this day I remember him quite well.
Unfortunately, I can't remember my instructor's name, but rather that she was quite fond of me and it made my girlfriend jealous as she took many underwater photos of myself while my lady felt I was receiving too much attention.
I remember there being quite the uproar over the name choice.
The book's name is Plachta — Plachta knows about an amazing alchemy item called the Cauldron of Knowledge but doesn't quite remember enough of the details about where to find it.
The hero, whose name is not worth remembering, is a generic spy dude that nonetheless looks quite a bit like the classic Solid Snake (he does have a night vision goggle eye thingy, which is not at all reminiscent of Splinter Cell).
Perhaps they will suggest a «minor» Abstract Expressionist, the one that everyone can name but no one can quite remember.
It'll be handy, I suppose, for those nonce terms and the names of rock bands you can't quite remember.
The app might even be useful for that cocktail party where you know the lawyer across the room works at Torys, and quite embarrassingly can not remember their name.
Remember that hiring managers and other people who will interview you are quite likely to see your cover letter and resume file names, so make sure those titles are professional and appropriate.
I can remember quite a few big names who in fact have been suspended previously for professional misconducts.
I was impressed, they pilled on crayons, markers, dirt, food you name it they put it on a tile painted with this paint in a satin or egg shell finish I don't remember but it was quite matte not shinny.
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