เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

be a sitting duck การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • But with a bad leg, he'd be a sitting duck.
  • Standing in the pocket, he looks like he should be a sitting duck.
  • One of the main targets of the opposition refuses to be a sitting duck.
  • A primitive man standing out on an open plain would be a sitting duck.
  • And although the political climate has improved somewhat, he'd be a sitting duck in Sarajevo ."
  • I think the worst thing you can do against guys like that is be passive and be a sitting duck.
  • In his memoirs, Dodd claimed that Kolb " would be a sitting duck for anyone who ran against him.
  • With the possibility of not having Marshall Faulk, though, Warner could be a sitting duck for the speedy Redskins'linebackers in his return.
  • Many in the department feared that if Clinton appointed a Washington outsider to the commerce post, the department would be a sitting duck for Republican budget cutters.
  • "I'm not going to let him do the things he likes to do, I won't be a sitting duck, just there to get hit.
  • Scott Morrison, an analyst with Donaldson, Lufkin & AMP; Jenrette, says that sadly, the domestic steel industry may be a sitting duck in the churning world economic waters.
  • She chose the United States instead because the opportunities are more lucrative here and she figured her chances of winning were good since Buford-Bailey, especially, seemed to be a sitting duck.
  • "I would catch the ball and be a sitting duck because I had to hold the ball in one arm and I couldn't stiff-arm anybody, " he said.
  • Typically, she concluded, " We could have gone on touring around the country, probably playing to packed houses and getting our money back, but I'd rather be a sitting duck in a big pond ."
  • I think of that Philadelphia game three years ago when then-coach George Seifert took him out of the game so he wouldn't be a sitting duck for the Eagles'pass rush in the lopsided 49er loss, and Young was furious.
  • Still, Clinton delivered his speech from a position of political strength _ a double-digit lead in most public opinion polls _ that none of his advisers would have dreamed possible little more than a year ago when Clinton argued for his relevance and was deemed, politically, to be a sitting duck.
  • He knew, he said, that as the star of television's most expensive new CBS situation comedy, " Cosby, " for which he is reported to be earning $ 1 million per episode, he would be a sitting duck for skepticism and the usual cynical journalists'questions, such as: