Sentences with phrase «real fine job»

Some do a real fine job.
Thats a real fine job Mayor.

Not exact matches

At the time, I was moping that the family vacation to Rome — a place I imagined did a fine job with these throughout tomato season — we'd been trying to take for as long as we'd been a family had gotten postponed again due to all of those real - life things that have the nerve to get in the way of a good time.
i imagine it can be real fine line to walk between doing your job as a reporter and not pissing everyone off to the point where you can't even get a boilerplate quote for a game recap.
Personally, I welcome — this being a debate site - real people with real fan opinions and have no intention of saying less than I mean, since to me that is hypocritical at worst or sitting on the fence at best, in true Alan Smith style (as opposed to fine proper and honest, as they see it, pundits like NEVILLE, CARRAGHER AND SOUNESS, who are above all honest and earn their corn - unlike Walcott - by doing the job they are paid to do.)
This led us into the «Galactico» era where Real Madrid took to signing all of the globe's superstars and did a pretty fine job at it with Messrs Zidane, Figo, Ronaldo and Beckham.
He is learning to follow a number sequence, identify holiday shapes, create connections between the items on this tree and the items on our real trees, apply his fine motor skills on the use buttons, and practice responsibility, as it is his job everyday to find and hang up the next number.
She did a fine job of making a thinly - written character become real.
Although the characters tend to the stock and the film's long midsection sags, The Finest Hours does a respectable job of telling, as tribute, its story of real - life heroism.
The actors are a real strength, with Bale doing a very fine job in showing Evans to be a plain man with an unremarkable life, so very disappointing to his son (Lerman, The Number 23) that thirsts for men of adventure.
Ledger does a fine job with his understated, unexpressive performance, just like a real cowboy, even though his mumbled line readings often render the dialogue inaudible.
He does a fine job with both real persons (JFK, David Brinkley, Oswald) and minor players, all of them coming across as distinct and realistic.
It's fine to help out in times of great need, but if they have jobs and they keep coming back to you to help pay the bills, you're helping them to avoid the real problem, not solve it.
I can say they absolutely got the job done and if you only travel every now and again or if you don't fly often, which is the real killer of suitcases, then cheap suitcases are more than fine, they're the way to go.
That's a real shame because the game does a pretty fine job of painting a portrait of the time, presenting a lovely vintage 1960s aesthetic that boasts some great use of color.
Although just like with many board games, it's a great game to play every once in awhile and you don't even need other real players as the A.I. does a fine job.
Academic peer review mostly works just fine when nobody in the real world cares, but it's not up to the job of adjudicating ideological disputes.
They may be fine writers but the chances are they are simply writing resumes until a «real job» comes along.
RECA looks like the hero handing down fines and reporting to other Realtors and the public what a great job they are doing when in fact the real culprit are the Real Estate Boards and this absolute nonsense that we as Realtors can not as an industry have a set fee tariff for servreal culprit are the Real Estate Boards and this absolute nonsense that we as Realtors can not as an industry have a set fee tariff for servReal Estate Boards and this absolute nonsense that we as Realtors can not as an industry have a set fee tariff for service.
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