chinless การใช้
- Following the demise of Sunnyboys, Jeremy Oxley launched a new band called Chinless Elite.
- "Futurama " has a cast of unique characters who are as lovable and fallible as they are pop-eyed and chinless.
- When George confronts him over this, the blind date calls him " chinless, " and the episode ends with George rubbing his chin and looking perturbed.
- Alma Schindler recorded in her diary before the beginning of their affair that he " cuts the most comical figure imaginable _ a caricature, chinless and short, with bulging eyes ."
- So when you see all those'chinless wonders'strutting about in their posh uniforms, you will know that for eight weeks they have had an absolutely appalling time, probably worse than you will get anywhere outside a Victorian prison ."
- Few readers could resist the fantasy of Wodehouse's England _ a planet of endless sunny days and cocktail-fueled evenings, full of chinless wonders in plus-fours and tiara-wearing old trouts in mad pursuit of marriageable young men for their daughters.
- The license for the multistyle, puffy-face, chinless dolls, so popular in the mid-' 80s that grown people actually slapped each another to get to them, has been been picked up by Mattel Inc ., the world's largest toy maker.
- Recorded in Monument's Nashville studios in early 1963, " In Dreams " peaked at number 7 on Philip Norman, a Beatles biographer, later wrote " As Orbison performed, chinless and tragic, the Beatles stood in the wings, wondering how they would dare to follow him ".
- Its style evokes a postwar France making its stubborn, eccentric way into the modern world, a nation of chain-smoking truck drive0s and accordion-squeezing pop singers, presided over by Charles de Gaulle, whose beaked, chinless profile is mirrored in many of the film's faces, including Champion's.
- After thousands of generations of living without sunlight, the Morlocks have dull grey-to-white skin, chinless faces, large greyish-red eyes with a class distinction present in his own time : the Morlocks are the working class who had to work underground so that the rich upper class could live in luxury.
- Reinvigorated, Everett tackled a collage of character roles _ portraying the chinless Lord Rutledge opposite a chimp in " Dustin Checks In, " the languid prince of Wales in " The Madness of George III " and a loutish son in " Ready to Wear, " where he forged a friendship with Julia Roberts.
- The convention is hosted by the Boston area Wodehouse club, the New England Wodehouse Thingummy Society, better known in Plummie circles as NEWTS . A variety of small salamander, newts are the hobby and only passion of Augustus ( Gussie ) Fink-Nottle, a chinless and endearingly dim chum of Bertie's who appears in many Jeeves and Wooster novels, according to Woodger ..
- Wills wrote two novels; " Hoax " ( 1922 ), the life of a young man from the age of eighteen to twenty-seven, and " Harvey Landrum " ( 1924 ), a psychological study of chinless Harvey Landrum, who tries to conceal a sense of inferiority behind a false front of bravery, are written in a frank but restrained prose style.
- :The thing that lay half-bent on its side in a foetid pool of greenish-yellow ichor and tarry stickiness was almost nine feet tall, and the dog had torn off all the clothing and some of the skin . . . . It was partly human, beyond a doubt, with very manlike hands and head, and the goatish, chinless face had the stamp of the Whateleys upon it.
- I find it hard to believe that there are teeming hordes of readers and moviegoers avidly waiting to behold their half-simian, gnomish, toothy, hairy, browless, chinless, prehensile-toed, 4-foot-tall hominid Stone Age ancestors _ no more numerous an audience, certainly, than those avidly waiting to read, say, the soon-to-be-published memoirs of Kathie Lee Gifford.
- Once, the inevitable happens, and she wakes up late in the morning to see " a chubby, chinless man in his 50's with lots of hair " staring down at her while she sleeps . "'I'm sorry,'he said .'There must be some mistake .'He held up his key card, as if to prove that it had admitted him to the room ."
- In Britain, he told a group of television reporters recently, " If you've got a title, than you also don't have any brains . " ( The British news media were not amused by his mini-rant, calling him " the prince of petulance . " ) In truth, Edward does seem to spend a depressingly large percentage of his time trying to prove that he is not a chinless royal dolt playing at having a job.
- There was Gussie Fink-Nottle wearing the scarlet tights he roamed around London in all night after losing the address of a fancy-dress party, his money and his keys; the soft-brained old Ninth Earl of Emsworth and his prize sow, the Empress of Blandings; Lady Bassett, the big-game hunter who threatened unsuitable suitors with an elephant gun; and, of course, Bertie Wooster, the brainless, chinless wonder continually saved from disaster by Jeeves, his infinitely resourceful gentleman's gentleman.
- These include " a dirty-faced child ", [ Dandelions, 39 ] a " chinless creature with slack stockings ", [ 39 ] and " a baby with a big head and a chalk-white face who didn't look as though it was for this world long . " [ 39 ] All " her ever thinks about is her belly, she would eat a raw monkey if there was any chance . " [ 41 ] In a long poem, he describes lots of people one might encounter in a dole office : " the wives of unemployed window cleaners, threadbare dandies, part-time tatooists, ex-bin men with double ruptures, alcoholic chefs, addleheads, pinheads, honest clerks, and loud-mouthed shitheads, with hanging trouser arses, flyboys and water-headed idiots led by their mothers, and reasonable men, genuine victims with polished shoes . " [ 44 ] Also a man who helps poor people make claims : " a master of claims and benefits, a poor man's lawyer in fact ", [ 57 ] helping " a poverty-stricken illiterate ", [ 57 ] and " men who have put their hopes on horses-men that have lived beyond their women, and those who were always too ill-shaped to love, and so loved drink . . . and laughing men, who have boozed their dead wives club money, and those that sleep late and stand waiting for opening time ", [ 58 ] for " drinking men often die lonely deaths, those who have forsaken women and have died in their camaraderie of booze . " [ 64 ] As opposed to those " dutiful husbands who have faced up to their responsibilities and not drunk every penny they could get their hands on . " [ 64 ] He describes " an old man in a gate hole spits into the cobbled backs and watches a young woman with a fat behind, pinning washing out, in a pair of slacks . " [ 65 ] He describes a pub regular called Bernard who " has a small stomach and has difficulty in polishing off a bag of crisps at one go ", [ 67 ] Love, Berry suggests, " is also often held in silence and sometimes you don't know it's been there till it's gone . " [ 86]