Sentences with phrase «turn on a dime like»

Not exact matches

is it the fact that people who are so feared of the mentally ill that they they think where like animals who can turn on a dime.
«In games like this, after you've worked 365 days to get into the playoffs, sometimes these games can turn on a dime, on one defensive play,» Armstrong said.
The front wheels turn on a dime with the lock option so that you don't feel like you're pushing around two kids.
You'll like the middle handle to help with steering, too, and parents say it turns on a dime.
It rolls like a dream and turns on a dime, even with one hand.
And like all great performances, Dorval is able to turn on a dime with the material, like when she finds the moments of humor in Xavier Dolan's wonderful script and nails them.
Turns on a dime, hugs the road like it's eating up the blacktop.
There's no other car on the market that combines the cargo space of a hatchback, the fuel economy that is nearly 40 mpg highway and handling that turns on a dime, all for a low price, like the 2017 Versa Note!
Like a battleship, book publishing doesn't turn on a dime, so the old year's trends don't usually determine a new year's books.
They don't have to be able to «turn on a dime» like an individual... but they could devote departments to just one thing... being nimble in the business world.
Publishers have long - entrenched ideas, facilities, processes, and business models that can't turn on a dime, and they're seeing increased competition from online retailers (like Amazon and B&N) and smaller publishers, who don't need the huge economies of scale and financial capital that the print book business requires.
I do not normally like to own commodity stocks as they can turn on the dime, however, there are few exceptions like BBL that I'm considering to add in my portfolio, and keeping an eye on OKE as well.
The can accelerate quickly, turn on a dime, and generally jump like they have springs in their feet.
Of course, evolved human nature does not turn on a dime, and sometimes these sorts of statements, depending on their context, can muddle distinctions among what has happened, what is happening, what we'd like to have happen, what would be most healthy to happen, what should happen, and so forth.
«Turn on a dime» is more like «flock around the latest torch lit in the darkness», until it sputters out and everyone wanders around howling and moaning and waiting for the next one.
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