a kick in the teeth การใช้
- The second goal was a kick in the teeth for us.
- Tait described this as " a kick in the teeth ".
- We have received a judgment that has been a kick in the teeth,
- It was kind of a kick in the teeth and cost us the league championship,
- Or a kick in the teeth.
- "A loss would be a kick in the teeth, an embarrassment, " said Jason Marsh of Bristol, England.
- "That's quite a kick in the teeth to battered investors who have already suffered a stock market meltdown,"
- These tireless advocates of the benefits of zero deficits are about to get a kick in the teeth.
- Still, without pari-mutuel betting, little is heard about the industry, and for some horsemen, that's a kick in the teeth.
- "Hannibal " is a kick in the teeth to anyone who was deeply moved by Starling's journey in that film.
- If that's the case, their 20-17 overtime loss to the Detroit Lions on Monday night was a kick in the teeth.
- But the sensational results are a walking advertisement for manufactured beauty and a kick in the teeth for the more natural look.
- For that to happen and end up losing the game, that would have been pretty much a kick in the teeth, really.
- And he gave Wall Street a kick in the teeth, proclaiming that the bull market of the last few years cannot last forever.
- She told the Daily News that the public outrage over the jury's decision was " like getting a kick in the teeth ."
- "a kick in the teeth " to St . Helens, " everybody's favorite pariah " and a man who is " deeply loathed ."
- "It's a kick in the teeth and I would like to see the All Blacks respond by threatening to pull out of the tournament.
- "For every step forward we take, it feels like two steps back and a kick in the teeth, " said Amer Sports Too captain Abby Seagar.
- While Christopher Browder was speaking of Doom Loop to Clifton Motel, he said the following : " I want this record to be a kick in the teeth.
- Gooneratne called it " a kick in the teeth for Priya ", but thought that her character would want Susan to have her job, rather than someone else.
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