Sentences with phrase «who trundle»

Midnight Sun is otherwise a bland mix of familiar types (the doofus Dad, the quirky best friend who wears woolly hats indoors, etc.) who trundle along the rails of a predictable plot, one that relies on Katie preposterously keeping her illness a secret from Charlie until it inevitably catches up with her in a Cinderella - ish manner.

Not exact matches

It's an unfamiliar role for a guy who just a few years ago was trundling around town in a Lexus SUV.
Who actually enjoys trundling a shopping cart up and down the aisles, searching the shelves, settling for what the store has in stock, standing in line to pay and schlepping the heavy bags back home?
Nuanced it is, but light this food is not: Envy the guests who can just trundle to bed upstairs.
People who have left their passport with the Home Office for a visa are often deprived of it for years while the process trundles on, effectively barring them from leaving the country, even on holiday.
Now Wendy's brother is of course is Douglas Alexander, right hand man of Gordun, who got close to the big man way back in 1990 trundling around the UK behind him and being generally helpful, writing speeches that dammed markets, Thatcher and attacking privitisation program's.
Kroll's Jake, who in the opening scenes seems as if his troubles are literally pressing him down, finds a funny chemistry with his toddler charge (whom Jake trundles off to the playground in a wheelie suitcase, after he can't get the stroller to unfold).
For example, in a recent study of preservice teachers» conceptions of lunar phases, researchers reported pre - to postinstructional gains in scientific conceptions of more than 80 % for participants who used an astronomy simulation in the context of inquiry instruction (Bell & Trundle, 2008).
With two very comfortable queen sized beds, a single trundle bed and a sofa bed, it's the ideal place for singles, couples or families who enjoy privacy and room to move.
While the rest of the Anglo - Saxon world happily adopted the principles of a «fused» profession, where the same lawyers both prepare the cases and take matters to court, the English (and Welsh) trundle on with an antediluvian system which seems to suit primarily those people who benefit most from it: barristers.
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