Sentences with Six, Sentences about Six

Sentences with Six, Sentences about Six

1. I always get up at six.

2. It’s two minutes to six.

3. I usually wake up at six.

4. It’s two minutes past six.

5. I have six mouths to feed.

6. I sleep six hours a day on average.

7. She has been watching TV for six hours.

8. You have got a date at a quarter to six.

9. I feed six cats and three dogs in my garden.

10. My grandfather usually eats breakfast at six.

11. They haven’t been studying their books for six days.

12. I have had five quizzes and six tests so far this holiday.

13. She will not have been in London for six months by the time she leave.

14. For every minute you remain angry, you give up sixty seconds of peace of mind.

15. In all the land there is only one you, possibly two, but seldom more than sixteen.

16. Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months.

17. Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe.

18. If my doctor told me I had only six minutes to live, I wouldn’t brood. I’d type a little faster.

19. My doctor gave me six months to live, but when I couldn’t pay the bill he gave me six months more.

20. My mom’s one of 13 siblings, and they all got six kids, and till I was 13 everybody was in Compton.

21. I’d go to, like, six different schools in one year. We were on welfare, and my mom never ever worked.

22. That attitude toward women as objects may have worked for the late Sixties, but it doesn’t do so now.

23. Give me six lines written by the most honorable of men, and I will find an excuse in them to hang him.

24. When a man goes through six years training to be a doctor he will never be the same. He knows too much.

25. Every sixty seconds you spend angry, upset or mad, is a full minute of happiness you will never get back.

26. Mom and Pop were just a couple of kids when they got married. He was eighteen, she was sixteen and I was three.

27. You can take no credit for beauty at sixteen. But if you are beautiful at sixty, it will be your soul’s own doing.

28. You can take no credit for beauty at sixteen. But if you are beautiful at sixty, it will be your own soul’s doing.

29. I get started at 5:30 in the morning and write till 10 A.M. Then I hike six or seven miles before going back to work.

30. It’s a miserable life in Hollywood. You’re up at five or six o’clock in the morning to be ready to start shooting at nine.

31. Yes, it is easy to see that nearly six years of magical education have not been wasted on you, Potter. Ghosts are transparent.

32. I saw six men kicking and punching the mother-in-law. My neighbour said ‘Are you going to help?’ I said ‘No, six should be enough.’

33. 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.

34. I could wake up six in the morning, go downstairs and record. I learned how to use ProTools and everything. Whenever I felt it, I could record.

35. If someone thinks that love and peace is a cliche that must have been left behind in the Sixties, that’s his problem. Love and peace are eternal.

36. 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.

37. In her whole life Mom never earned more than five or six dollars a week. Being without a husband, it was hard for her to find any place at all for us to live.

38. A statesman wants courage and a statesman wants vision but believe me, after six months’ experience, he wants first, second, third and all the time – patience.

39. Here in L.A. the standard of beauty is kind of ridiculous. I want to be doing this when I’m in my fifties and sixties and this isn’t what I’m going to look like.

40. Man, if I made one million dollars I would come in at six in the morning, sweep the stands, wash the uniforms, clean out the office, manage the team and play the games.

41. 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.

42. You know what I like to do? I love waking up early, making them breakfast, taking them to school, having time in the morning with them. With six kids, it’s like a reality show.

43. I tend to start at 9 o’clock in the morning and write until 3. Those are my best hours. They fit the other rhythms of the world. So I write for six hours, pretty much without any breaks.

44. Treat your kid like a darling for the first five years. For the next five years, scold them. By the time they turn sixteen, treat them like a friend. Your grown up children are your best friends.

45. I did know Ted Hughes and I partly wrote the book to explain to myself and others the complexities of a marriage that was for six years wonderfully productive of poetry and then ended in tragedy.

46. I think one of the most pervasive evils in this world is greed and acquiring money for money’s sake. Once you have six houses and a plane, it’s just about a number. It’s never been anything I understood.

47. I like being in movies that have a great story. I’m not so interested in being a Hollywood star. It’s a job, you know. When you wake up at six in the morning every day for a week, it feels like hard work.

48. I would also like to act, once in a while, but not get up every morning at 5:30 or six o’clock and pound into the studio and get home at 7:30 or eight o’clock at night, or act over and over and over every night on Broadway, either.

49. The reasons why I left were to do with my interest in Buddhism. There were experiences over a period of about six months which caused me to decide to give up music, so one morning I felt I had to go to E.G. Management and tell them.

50. I remember driving to North Carolina when I was a little girl in a snowstorm to get down to my mom’s family in the Carolinas. There were chains on the car – it was the late sixties – and we were just singing in the car. Christmas carols.

51. Our son is in school now. You know, he’s six-and-a-half and so a big chunk of the day is taken up by school. So I’m hoping that I’ll be able to certainly take him to school in the morning, maybe pick him up in the afternoon and come back to work.

52. One of the most beautiful passages of Rousseau is that in the sixth book of Confessions, where he describes the awakening in him of the literary sense. Of such wisdom, the poetic passion, the desire of beauty, the love of art for its own sake, has most.

53. My mom played the recorder. But not having electricity, we had minimal exposure to music. As I got a little older, we had Walkmans and things that were battery-powered, but it would have been nice to be growing up in the iPod era. A tape only has six songs on a side.

54. All women have a perception much more developed than men. So all women somehow, being repressed for so many millennia, they ended up by developing this sixth sense and contemplation and love. And this is something that we have a hard time to accept as part of our society.

55. 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.

56. In third grade, I was taking tap-dance lessons, and about six weeks before the recital I wanted to quit. My mom said, ‘No, you’re going to stay with it.’ Well, I did it, and I was bad, too! But my parents never let their kids walk away from something because it was too hard.

57. When I was in the Peace Corps I never made a phone call. I was in Central Africa I didn’t make a phone call for two years. I was in Uganda for another four years and I didn’t make a phone call. So for six years I didn’t make a phone call, but I wrote letters, I wrote short stories, I wrote books.

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