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racetrack tout การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • He said analysts today are more like racetrack touts than sharp-penciled researchers.
  • Among these well-informed readers are racetrack touts with a profound mathematical understanding of odds-making.
  • The subject of the movie are fraudulent racetrack touts, who, in particular, used to call people known to be in deep debt and give them false tips.
  • On radio from 1945 to 1955, Leonard played an eccentric racetrack tout on " The Jack Benny Program " and later in the TV series of the same name.
  • On another track, you can hear Ball's " Husband " character acting like a racetrack tout to sell a used dress, while a similar style has Lucy Ricardo selling excess meat in a butcher shop.
  • Looking back at the 1960 campaign, a modern drama critic, handicapper, or racetrack tout would conclude that both John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Richard Milhous Nixon exuded more charisma and exercised more horse sense than Albert Arnold Gore Jr . and George Walker Bush.
  • One of his best performances came in Sturges "'The Sin of Harold Diddlebock " in 1946, when he played " Wormy ", the racetrack tout who convinces Harold Lloyd to have his first drink, setting off the events of the film.
  • Comic relief was provided by Roscoe the racetrack tout ( played by Louis Quinn ), and Gerald Lloyd " Kookie " Kookson III ( played by Edd Byrnes ), the rock and roll-loving, wisecracking, hair-combing hipster and aspiring PI who worked as the valet parking attendant at Dino's, the club next door to the detectives'office.
  • The mourners are Jack's three oldest friends _ a greengrocer, an undertaker and a racetrack tout _ and his grown son, Vince ( Ray Winstone ), who broke his father's heart when he forsook meat-cutting and became a car salesman . ( The Mercedes comes from his showroom . ) As the four travel toward Margate, the seaside resort where Jack asked that his ashes be scattered _ and where he dreamed of retiring with his wife, Amy ( Helen Mirren ) _ they look back on his flawed, decent life.
  • Clipped to the single-syllable touts, these sneaky souls can still be spotted coming back from the furzes on the heath at some of our huge raceways to tout _ the verb _ a horse to an unsuspecting bettor, thereby to manipulate the odds or get a piece of the winnings . ( A generation ago, I bought a double-breasted pinstripe suit; A . M . Rosenthal, then the executive editor of The New York Times, said, " You're supposed to look like a newspaperman, not a racetrack tout, " and I have not worn it since .)