Having a teenager in the family can mean you're in for an emotional roller-coaster ride. |
|
I even dream of a water slide area, like the one at Laguna Mar in Margarita and go-cart, bumper cars, Ferris wheel and roller-coaster areas. |
|
Dram prices are on the up again, thanks to makers manipulating the roller-coaster memory market. |
|
In other words, the roller-coaster analogy is limited, and these limitations may weaken Pinedo's account. |
|
I know that exaggerating my own roller-coaster reactions would be almost impossible. |
|
Nicely written sentences and a roller-coaster ending do not compensate for shallowness of meaning and lazy characterisation. |
|
But the book's message, and its roller-coaster style, ultimately triumphs over such complaints and concerns. |
|
The trademark roller-coaster narrative has been replaced by something more subtler, more powerful, but lacking none of the ambition or scope. |
|
Jacklin's life has been a roller-coaster of emotions, full of highs and lows. |
|
But his career was like a roller-coaster ride, lurching from despair to triumph and back again, before ending up the toast of a new generation. |
|
That's part of the often times emotional roller-coaster we call the grain markets. |
|
A roller-coaster week for currencies, which continue to show evidence of the nervousness affecting the financial markets. |
|
He is unsurpassed in providing insights into the psychological roller-coaster ride of top-class sport. |
|
Watch live as the jury delivers the verdict in her roller-coaster appeal trial. |
|
This basically means an economy that slows down to a steady, sustainable pace of expansion that keeps it off the boom-and-bust roller-coaster. |
|
Daily Beast contributors weigh in on where the night will take the Republican roller-coaster ride next. |
|
Notwithstanding, I learned a thing or two from the roller-coaster operator. |
|
That's what makes the difference between a roller-coaster thrill of a fright and a spine-chilling haunt. |
|
His Wednesday is going to be a roller-coaster ride from Rush Limbaugh to Fox to Laura Ingraham to who knows what. |
|
It appeared shortly afterwards, like his many other Tivoli galops, in a version for piano with a lithograph illustration of the roller-coaster on the cover. |
|
|
So every week it was an emotional roller-coaster. |
|
Bald Eagle courtship involves elaborate and beautiful nuptial displays, both calls and aerobatics, including cartwheels, roller-coaster swoops, and chases. |
|
Lately, Scearce, Department of Justice Canada lawyer by day, Hollywood screenwriter by night, is trying to stay grounded while experiencing the roller-coaster highs generated by the success of A Single Man. |
|
Show Me Love is an emotional roller-coaster ride for viewers of both genders and all sexual orientations, because the feelings it uncovers are universal in nature. |
|
His dramatic rehabilitation since then has not always been smooth, and in particular it is the evaluation of his early work that has been a roller-coaster. |
|
While roller-coaster design has grown increasingly daring in recent years, the theme park touts X as a coaster unlike any other. |
|
It all goes back to the roller-coaster nature of programming. |
|
It then started its wild roller-coaster ride, first up well into double digits by 1981, then down to zero, a move that twenty years later is still in progress. |
|
Players saluted supporters and the fans hailed their heroes who, at the third attempt in seven roller-coaster seasons, had managed to avoid instant relegation. |
|
You won't learn how to bake a cake or wallpaper the kitchen but you will have a thumping, pumping, roller-coaster ride through the virtual world of computer and video games. |
|
It was less a cinematic achievement than a roller-coaster ride. |
|
And somehow he will have to reconcile the galling fact that a large proportion of those self-same lads badly let him down during his roller-coaster managerial journey. |
|
He liked the water rides, but the big roller-coaster scared the pants off him. |
|
Humor based on scatology or bodily secretions, and the use of roller-coaster special effects, seems obligatory in children's movies, at least those made in the United States or Britain. |
|
Every yarn she tells is a ripping one, since either the imposture itself is a roller-coaster of adventures, or the impostor himself has wild inventions to promote. |
|
Flamingo Land has lots more terrifiers including the new vertical Velocity, the fastest launch roller-coaster of its type in the world. |
|
That's what I used to think, until some fellow roller-coaster fanatics and I trekked a great distance to Cedar Point Amusement Park Resort on the shore of Lake Erie. |
|
Snuggly set behind the wheel, you drive the car as if it was a roller-coaster wagon, gobbling corner after corner without even feeling the outside forces that so desperately try to send the machine into a tailspin. |
|