Sentences with phrase «whole zoo»

The phrase "whole zoo" refers to a situation or group of things that is chaotic, disorderly, or full of various different elements or people. Full definition
Toddlers love this book for the animals, but preschoolers «get» the humor of a whole zoo camping out in the zookeeper's bedroom and enjoy it on a whole different level!
You can make tons of these little critters for next to no cost, so feel free to craft a whole zoo.
It's a great place to meet up with friends and you don't feel like you have to do the whole zoo because you know you can come back for free anytime.
If theorists can crack that, Hasan says, «you'll find a whole zoo of new physics phenomena that we can not even imagine».
It can give you an up - quark, down - quark, and electron, photon, the whole zoo of particles that have been discovered.
And these hunts are turning up a whole zoo of microscopic creatures.
We completed the whole zoo in about 2 hours and had enough time to visit Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets for a little shopping and lunch downtown.
There's so much to do, work on, fulfil and I'm not even going to start with complaining on how my flat looks like a whole zoo of animals ran through it... Several times!
There's no doubt people do such things in reality — whether they speak those feelings aloud or not — but screenwriters Aline Brosh McKenna and Cameron Crowe (who also directed) sell the metaphors (In addition to the tiger, there's, well, the whole zoo) a bit too much.
DVD Release Date: 15 November 2005 There's a whole zoo of extra materials running wild on the DVD release of Madagascar.
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