Sentences with Didn’t, Sentences about Didn’t

Sentences with Didn’t, Sentences about Didn’t

1. My father didn’t show.

2. I didn’t make that up.

3. I didn’t say I agreed.

4. I didn’t put this here.

5. Didn’t you get my note?

6. I didn’t catch his name.

7. Didn’t you hear a scream?

8. I didn’t plan on staying.

9. Steve didn’t sleep a wink.

10. I didn’t make anything up.

11. Her hair didn’t look dyed.

12. I didn’t even see Alex go.

13. I didn’t do it on purpose.

14. He didn’t like being poor.

15. Didn’t you get the tickets?

16. He didn’t like bugs at all.

17. Alex didn’t go straight in.

18. I didn’t see what happened.

19. I didn’t find anything new.

20. They didn’t touch anything.

21. I didn’t run away from home.

22. I didn’t even consider that.

23. Alex didn’t hesitate at all.

24. I didn’t see anyone writing.

25. He didn’t tip on the way out.

26. I didn’t want you to hate me.

27. I didn’t think it was so bad.

28. Steve didn’t think I noticed.

29. Samuel didn’t want get caught.

30. Steve’s grades didn’t improve.

31. I didn’t see anything strange.

32. Didn’t that strike you as odd?

33. I didn’t do anything for Alex.

34. Didn’t you go to school today?

35. He didn’t like insects at all.

36. Alex didn’t attend class today.

37. Steve didn’t pass today’s exam.

38. I didn’t feel like celebrating.

39. He didn’t care about me at all.

40. I didn’t say Frank wasn’t smart.

41. Samuel didn’t have to rub it in.

42. Alex smiled, but didn’t respond.

43. I didn’t steal anything from you.

44. Why didn’t you press this button?

45. Alex didn’t mean to hurt anybody.

46. I didn’t see anything suspicious.

47. Growing up I didn’t watch movies.

48. I didn’t realize you were hungry.

49. Alexis didn’t seem very concerned.

50. You just made that up, didn’t you?

51. Why didn’t you clean the bathroom?

52. Steve didn’t do that intentionally.

53. Frank didn’t do that intentionally.

54. I didn’t notice anything suspicious.

55. Frank said he didn’t mean to hit me.

56. I didn’t want to split up with Frank.

57. The boy claimed that he didn’t do it.

58. I’m sorry that I didn’t reply sooner.

59. George certainly didn’t expect to win.

60. I didn’t mean to give that impression.

61. That women didn’t die a natural death.

62. We didn’t know what train they’d be on.

63. Steve actually didn’t see the accident.

64. I hope you didn’t lend Frank any money.

65. I didn’t know the truth until yesterday.

66. Why didn’t you come to school yesterday?

67. Alex tried to sleep, but it didn’t work.

68. The majority didn’t accept the proposal.

69. Anderson didn’t have to say it so rudely.

70. Frank didn’t come to the picnic yesterday.

71. My association with them didn’t last long.

72. We didn’t have a beauty shop as I grew up.

73. Steve didn’t want to make any assumptions.

74. Samuel said that he didn’t mean to be late.

75. Jim didn’t have the courage to disobey Pam.

76. I overslept because my alarm didn’t go off.

77. Mesut didn’t like yesterday’s movie at all.

78. I would prefer that you didn’t submit this.

79. I’ll bet you didn’t sleep a wink last night.

80. Samuel didn’t have the guts to shoot Jessica.

81. We didn’t go on a picnic because it was cloudy.

82. I have never been hurt by anything I didn’t say.

83. Frank looked grouchy, so Mary didn’t approach him.

84. Steve didn’t have time to go jogging every morning.

85. I found her a very nice car but she didn’t like it.

86. You didn’t tell anybody about what we did, did you?

87. Alex and Samuel didn’t come, we need their computer.

88. A professional writer is an amateur who didn’t quit.

89. My sister didn’t utter a single word of encouragement.

90. My sister told her boyfriend that she didn’t love him.

91. I didn’t like having reasonable arguments thrown at me.

92. I’m very sorry but your daughter’s grades didn’t improve.

93. The marriage didn’t work out but the separation is great.

94. I got up early in the morning but you didn’t get up early.

95. I waited until late yesterday, when he didn’t come, I went to bed.

96. Happiness often sneaks in through a door you didn’t know you left open.

97. If women didn’t exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning.

98. They didn’t leave us a perfect world, but we can leave it to our children.

99. They didn’t leave us a excellent world, but we can leave it to our children.

100. That was barley a blip on the map. That didn’t even leave a trace on anyone.

101. I can’t think of one person I’ve ever met who didn’t like some type of music.

102. I am not a pig farmer. The pigs had a great time, but I didn’t make any money.

103. I was a brownie for a day. My mom made me stop. She didn’t want me to conform.

104. Like nightmares, dreams were insidious things, and didn’t like being locked away.

105. A lot of times you get credit for stuff in your movies you didn’t intend to be there.

106. Bachelors know more about women than married men if they didn’t they’d be married too.

107. Even if we didn’t know the context, we were instructed to remember that context existed.

108. If what you’re asking is how I debated whether or not to love her the answer is I didn’t.

109. I had done some flimflam movies, but I didn’t understand what being an actor meant anymore.

110. My mom’s a Catholic, and my dad’s a Jew, and they didn’t want anything to do with anything.

111. Disneyland is a work of love. We didn’t go into Disneyland just with the idea of making money.

112. Patton was living in the Dark Ages. Soldiers were peasants to him. I didn’t like that attitude.

113. Steve didn’t seem inclined to elaborate and I didn’t really want to know all the details anyway.

114. My mom didn’t use face cream, like, nothing at all. She’s got great skin and looks very youthful.

115. I’m sorry I didn’t wear paint this morning. I tend not to wear it unless I’m getting highly paid.

116. My mom came from such humble beginnings and especially my dad as well. He didn’t go to university.

117. You know, I don’t think any mother aims to be a single mom. I didn’t wish for that, but it happened.

118. The Vatican is against surrogate mothers. Good thing they didn’t have that rule when Jesus was born.

119. I didn’t know that President Bush would endorse a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage.

120. My mom’s been married three times my dad has been married a lot. I didn’t really see my dad that much.

121. My mom just didn’t put a very high premium on me being like really famous or really wealthy or anything.

122. Mommy smoked but she didn’t want us to. She saw smoke coming out of the barn one time, so we got whipped.

123. It didn’t even occur to me that I’m the last person in the world who should play salsa or Brazilian music.

124. I’ve often thought if I didn’t make my marriage work, I would have failed at my one true shot at happiness.

125. An economist is an expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn’t happen today.

126. I didn’t have any confidence in my beauty when I was young. I felt like a character actress, and I still do.

127. I didn’t grow up thinking of movies as film, or art, but as movies, something to do on a Saturday afternoon.

128. Even when I was a little kid, I always said I would be in the movies one day, and damned if I didn’t make it.

129. She didn’t care that people called her a bitch. ‘It’s just another word for feminist,’ she told me with pride.

130. I have loved movies as the number one thing in my life so long that I can’t ever remember a time when I didn’t.

131. Dude, I didn’t say Jude Law can’t act. I didn’t say Jude Law was in bad movies. I just said he’s in every movie.

132. Beauty opened all the doors it got me things I didn’t even know I wanted, and things I certainly didn’t deserve.

133. I’m a sappy mom now. I didn’t think I would be. I thought I’d be a cool mom who keeps everything in perspective.

134. Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.

135. And of course I didn’t make any money from stand up for years, so I had temp jobs. That was the way I made money.

136. This morning I was laughing at my cat who was running up the stairs and slipped, and pretended like it didn’t happen.

137. My mom didn’t want me to go to college. She didn’t want me to read – when I read, I may as well have been holding a pineapple.

138. Honestly, I didn’t have the patience for biology or history in an academic sense, but I always liked the kind of big questions.

139. Once I accepted Christ I immediately had peace. I still didn’t have a place to live, I still didn’t have a car, but I had peace.

140. I didn’t grow up identifying with beauty. I grew up thinking I could be smart and funny – those are the things I got feedback on.

141. I quit high school on my birthday. It was my senior year and I didn’t see the point. This was 1962, and I was ready to make music.

142. She’d absolutely adored the library an entire building where anyone could take things they didn’t own and feel no remorse about it.

143. The beauty, the poetry of the fear in their eyes. I didn’t mind going to jail for, what, five, six hours? It was absolutely worth it.

144. I didn’t feel like reading that night, so I went downstairs and watched a half-hour long commercial that advertised an exercise machine.

145. My mom didn’t ever think I would take to acting because I was a very shy, very reserved kind of child. But obviously, something changed!

146. Being an only child, I didn’t have any other family but my mom and dad really, since the rest of my family lived quite far away from London.

147. I was a Christian. I didn’t want to have sex before marriage, I was a bit uptight and not very self-confident. I was a virgin until I was 26.

148. For a moment, I pretended. Not that we weren’t two different species, because I didn’t see him that way, but that we actually liked each other.

149. What the hell are you getting so upset about?’ he asked her bewilderedly in a tone of contrive amusement. ‘I thought you didn’t believe in God.

150. I didn’t want to go out and change anything. I just wanted to make the music that was part of my background, which was rock and blues and hip-hop.

151. My mom had me when she was 16, and I was an only child, which is probably why I received a lot of love and didn’t miss that my father wasn’t around.

152. My mom is a really good cook. I didn’t get the cooking gene, but she cooks this really amazing dinner every Christmas, and that’s always really fun.

153. In the late ’70s, maybe just before I started, there was still an attitude that if you did film you didn’t do TV and vice versa, but that’s gone now.

154. My childhood should have taught me lessons for my own fatherhood, but it didn’t because parenting can only be learned by people who have no children.

155. My parents divorced when I was young but I was brought up in two really loving households. I didn’t have a contentious relationship with my mom or dad.

156. Mom never quit on me. My only regret is that she didn’t live long enough to share some of the money and comforts my work in show business has brought me.

157. For example, I loved English and history at school. I would have loved to have done a degree in either. But my Mom said I didn’t have time for university.

158. I didn’t come from a trailer park. I grew up middle class and my dad had money and my mom made my lunch. I got a car when I was sixteen. I’m proud of that.

159. My mom started smoking when she was 11. She went to the hill next door to try her first cigarette. She set the entire hill on fire, but it didn’t deter her.

160. I first wanted to be a psychiatrist. I decided against that in medical school when I discovered that psychiatrists didn’t, in reality, do what they did on TV.

161. I’ve never had siblings, I didn’t grow up in a big family it was just me and my single mom. And hectic family dysfunction was actually something that I craved.

162. I decided to pursue music, so I dropped out of school and I told my parents I didn’t want any money from them. I got three jobs and I just hit the ground running.

163. It’s so funny looking back, but my so-called overnight success actually took 15 years. I remember when I didn’t have any money, and my only car was mom’s Hyundai.

164. I got up one Christmas morning and we didn’t have nothing to eat. We didn’t have an apple, we didn’t have an orange, we didn’t have a cake, we didn’t have nothing.

165. Mmm….she’s doomed! You’re doomed!! They’re all doomed! Notice I didn’t specify what kind of doom, so no matter what happens, I predicted it. How very WISE of me.

166. We didn’t have a TV in the living room and all my friends thought we were kind of weird. When they’d come over, my mom wanted to talk to them about current events.

167. You were up at 5 o’clock in the morning, and then you’d ride in a caravan, because we didn’t have big movie trucks or trailers that is the hardware of a movie camp.

168. We didn’t have movies in this little mining town. When I was 12 my mom took me to New York and I saw Bye Bye Birdie, with people singing and dancing, and that was it.

169. I’m extremely blessed to have the extraordinary mother that I have, and I don’t mean Diana Ross, I mean the mother. My mom paved a road that didn’t exist, as did Oprah.

170. I had no illusions about love anymore. It came, it went, it left casualties or it didn’t. People weren’t meant to be together forever, regardless of what the songs say.

171. I didn’t wake up one morning and not be in the Replacements. We’re all that forever, and I’ve just grown older. I mean, I haven’t lost anything. I’ve gained a few things.

172. After wrestling with myself for six months, I began medical treatment. During that time I started a band with some friends of mine called Jack’s Car, but that didn’t last.

173. It really was hand-to-mouth and you can say, ‘Poor little me, how dreadful, what a deprived childhood’, but I didn’t feel that way at all. It’s all about the attitude at home.

174. Not that we didn’t have close relationships with our parents – I’m very close to my mom – but parents didn’t think anything of going off for a few weeks and leaving their kids.

175. Our songs touch people, and take them back to a time when there was no threat of terrorism, when you didn’t have to lock your doors and when Mom and Dad took care of everything.

176. I was always shocked when I went to the doctor’s office and they did my X-ray and didn’t find that I had eight more ribs than I should have or that my blood was the color green.

177. After I read all the medical journals and watched all the documentaries, I still didn’t understand the physical sensation of ticking and where it comes from and what it feels like.

178. My mom didn’t let me play video games growing up, so now I do. Gaming gives me a chance to just let go, blow somebody up and fight somebody from another dimension. It’s all escapism.

179. The reason for not getting married was that I just didn’t have a partner to get married to. Climbing mountains was more attractive to me than marriage, or other fun things like that.

180. I didn’t know that I could do a talk show. I didn’t know that we could bring variety to daytime. I didn’t know that people wanted to see singing, and dancing and comedy in the morning.

181. I felt that I had worked hard my entire life and deserved to enjoy all the temptations around me. I felt I was entitled, and thanks to money and fame, I didn’t have to go far to find them.

182. In a still hot morning, the tide went out and didn’t come back in. This was not a spectacular event. The sea did not roll up like a scroll, like the sky in Revelations. It quietly withdrew.

183. I was never into the popular school or clique or anything. Then I started doing movies when I was in high school, so then I got popular. Then the girls paid attention to you who didn’t before.

184. I wanted to perform well for my mom and dad, because in high school, I didn’t have a job. My brothers, they worked at Pizza Hut or places like that, but sports, that was my way of giving back.

185. There was an awful suspicion in my mind that I’d finally gone over the hump, and the worst thing about it was that I didn’t feel tragic at all, but only weary, and sort of comfortably detached.

186. When I was a child, I wanted to be an actor, but I had really bad buckteeth. I didn’t want to get braces, but my mom said I couldn’t be an actor if I didn’t get the braces. So, I got the braces.

187. My dad is a bank president and my mom was an accountant and they didn’t think that seeking the life of a freelance writer was very practical, you see. Of course, I was just as determined to do it.

188. I didn’t know my Dad – he moved out early. And my mom’s politics were kind of hardscrabble. She didn’t think about Democrats or Republicans. She thought about who made sense. I’ve been both in my life.

189. I went through a long period of time in that marriage when I didn’t believe anything was my fault. I had to face what my part was, and only because of that difficult work was I able to trust a man again.

190. Last time I spoke to my mom she called me from a pay phone, and we didn’t have the best talk. Ever since my stepdad passed away three years ago, she has been very depressed and hasn’t been herself at all.

191. Another thing that’s quite different in writing a book as a practicing newspaperman is that if you look at what you’ve written the next morning and you think you didn’t get it quite right, you can fix it.

192. I think Nina Simone has had an amazing journey. She was spicy and she had attitude and she didn’t care, she wanted her money in a paper bag and don’t mess with me and I’ve been doing some research on that so.

193. I told my agents that I didn’t want to go on the audition. But as that was happening I called my mom, who has been watching the show from the beginning, and my mom said, ‘It’s the coolest show. You have to go.’

194. If I felt, in the event of a royal wedding, inspired to write about people coming together in marriage or civil partnership, I would just be grateful to have an idea for the poem. And if I didn’t, I’d ignore it.

195. I had no idea of the size of my bank account as a teen, and I didn’t care to know. That was my mom’s job, I figured that I would just find out when I turned 18. If you can’t trust your mom, then who can you trust?

196. I didn’t really know what I wanted to do, and then I got this call from a casting director in Los Angeles. She remembered me from something years before, and she called my mom wanting me to audition for this thing.

197. The fact that he didn’t get credit for a while is more the story of social injustice. But his own spirit wasn’t driven by that, and wasn’t dependent upon that. He just wished he had the cash to go to medical school.

198. I remember, my mom didn’t have any help, so if she needed to be somewhere after school, we’d just go down to the neighbors’ and she’d give us a snack and make sure we did our homework. There weren’t any latchkey kids.

199. So, from a very young age, my mom tells me that I wanted to be Michael J. Fox. I didn’t want to be an actor. I just wanted to be Michael J. Fox for awhile. And then, I realized that he was an actor, so I pursued that.

200. I didn’t understand that I could sing until I was like 11 or 12. My mom heard me singing around the house and she said, What are you doing? You really can sing! So then I started going to school and singing to the girls.

201. My mom and I have always been really close. She’s always been the friend that was always there. There were times when, in middle school and junior high, I didn’t have a lot of friends. But my mom was always my friend. Always.

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