Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Still, with its bubbleheaded beings and oddities of place and event, it's not without charm (Glueck).
AGES 6-10 - A bubbleheaded fairy tale poses no real hazard, but children might be reminded that life doesn't work this way.
-is such a bubbleheaded, retro vision of growing up in the sixties (or any other time) that you go out of the theatre giggling happily.
Imagine a bubbleheaded indoor underground version of Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade, add a few frivolous frissons, and the show floats on stage at the Kitchen.
That is the excuse for populating the ads with bubbleheaded babes in skimpy swimsuits, old men without teeth and cowboys who sing about beer's effect on their bladders.
Mary Pat's eyes widened in momentary alarm, persuading Yazov that she was indeed a typical bubbleheaded Western female, though she was probably quite a handful in bed.
When the bubbleheaded Mayor, played by Barry Bostwick, grants a favor he knows he should not have granted and says to himself, "I've got to learn how to say no," Mayor Coles hooted.
Writing in The Daily Telegraph, Vicki Woods called her a "bubbleheaded dingbat with California smog for brains," and several papers have gleefully pointed out that "Monica's Story" is selling at a discount at some stores.
She also wrote several books for children, but it was not until she started her television career as a co-presenter of "The Tube," a show about music, that she became a celebrity in her own right, affecting a bubbleheaded, giggly personality that belied her sharp intelligence, friends said.
She argues that it takes a skillful reader to recognize that Pollyanna is not all the bubbleheaded gladness she seems, but instead one of the most cunning tricksters to appear in American children's books since Tom Sawyer persuaded his friends to whitewash the fence.
Ms. Bateman apparently wanted a change from playing the bubbleheaded Mallory Keaton on television's "Family Ties," so here is Jennie proving she's smart, giving her high-school valedictory speech: "We can make the kind of noise that's going to wake the world from its stagnant slumber."