Sentences with Corn, Sentences about Corn

Sentences with Corn, Sentences about Corn

1. How much corn is in the glass?

2. Frank dashed to the corner to mail a letter.

3. A bad corn promise is better than a good lawsuit.

4. Heaven can be found in the most unlikely corners.

5. To measure other people’s corn by one’s own bushel.

6. Doing what you love is the cornerstone of having abundance in your life.

7. The day of fortune is like a harvest day, we must be busy when the corn is ripe.

8. I know it sounds a bit corny, but I do think that beauty and sexiness come from within.

9. There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that’s your own self.

10. In a multi-racial society, trust, understanding and tolerance are the cornerstones of peace and order.

11. The great moments of rock ‘n’ roll were never off in some corner of the music world, in a self-constructed ghetto.

12. I’m not eager to jump into marriage again. I’m in the corner right now, wearing my dunce cap. That area is obviously a nightmare.

13. Most of the things we decide are not what we know to be the best. We say yes, merely because we are driven into a corner and must say something.

14. Every corny thing that’s said about living with nature – being in harmony with the earth, feeling the cycle of the seasons – happens to be true.

15. There can never be such a thing as a free market, because it is human nature to cheat, monopolize, and buy off others so as to corner the market.

16. I know this is kind of corny, but we thought about renewing our vows again because I think my mom would really love it if we did that in Arkansas, where I came from.

17. Traditional marriage between a man and a woman has been a cornerstone of our society for generations. If we are going to change that, it ought to be done by the will of the people.

18. It was not enough to come and listen to a great sermon or message every Sunday morning and be confined to those four walls and those four corners. You had to get out and do something.

19. What is sacred among one people may be ridiculous in another and what is despised or rejected by one cultural group, may in a different environment become the cornerstone for a great edifice of strange grandeur and beauty.

20. Sometimes I’ve been to a party where no one spoke to me for a whole evening. The men, frightened by their wives or sweeties, would give me a wide berth. And the ladies would gang up in a corner to discuss my dangerous character.

21. There were a few teachers who just did not like me because of my face. Once, I was told to stand in the corner until I cheered up. The attitude was, ‘Oh, for God’s sake, what’s the matter with him?’ But it’s just a natural expression.

22. But I spent just two calendar years at Cornell University, though it was covering more than three years of work, and then went to medical school and did become interested in psychiatry, and even helped form a kind of psychiatry club in medical school.

23. I can’t remember a time when my mom didn’t work. She has forever been on the move: a go-getter. When my brother Adel and I had a paper route as kids, my mom would get up before us at the crack of dawn to drop off the Washington Post at different corners.

24. Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.

25. A lot of people think Formula One isn’t a sport because everyone drives a car when they go to work in the morning. But we’re pulling up to six G on a corner or during breaking, which is almost like being a fighter pilot. So we have to do a lot of work on our neck muscles.

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