Sentences with phrase «whole litany»

The phrase "whole litany" means a long list or series of things, usually negative or unfortunate ones. Full definition
Econ301 Now you have got L4H started you are going to get whole litany of Christian apologetics and of course L4H will not apologise for boring you to distraction.
Canada has outlined a whole litany of U.S. «nullification and impairment» measures affecting Canadian trade extending over decades, including the U.S. refusal to fully implement WTO panel rulings, saying that those decisions only cover past importations and only those particular products, leaving the impugned measure in force for future cases.
She has by now developed a whole litany of complaints about the school project, and has even gone so far as to rent a room in a park district building Wednesday night for her own meeting between neighbors and school officials.
What are you going to do about the fact that there's a whole litany of people who are under investigation, who are involved in the administration?
She defends and vouches for and places blind faith in the whole litany of Bush intelligence officials who have spent the last six years radicalizing this country and breaking the law.
Scarborough said the agents showed up at his hotel room at 5:45 this morning, and took «a whole litany of things,» including his smartphone.
A master filmmaker and even better scribe, one who can have their main character lead the charge against a dying chief of police for inaction due her daughter's murder, a cop who he thinks his job is just about terrorizing townsfolk and a whole litany of characters who swim in the pool of the morally gray and allow them moments of sincere redemption or humanity.
NEXT TO NORMAL This three - time Tony Award - winning rock musical follows a suburban family struggling with a whole litany of problems.
Your whole litany is irrelevant to the point that at last half of modern science papers and results are almost certainly wrong and that self interest has something to do with it.
Having done as you the last few years, I agree that there is a whole litany of horrible things (and NO good things) that MIGHT happen as a result of AGW if we don't take immediate action.
Although we have authority to deflect cases to the Court of Appeals, which relieves much of the load, the more difficult and complex cases, plus all cases involving constitutional questions, death penalty, first impressions, newly developing law and a whole litany of special subjects (election contests, utility rates, annexations, bar and judicial discipline matters, etc.) are assigned to our Court.
There is a whole litany of free demos available to you on the PlayStation store.
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