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How To Use Boggle In A Sentence

  • Would you be "boggled" if I suggest that the characterisation of blacks here as a mob of rampaging gang-rapists is a product of prejudice and, in its emotional manipulation, serves to reinforce prejudice? Wisdom, Justice And Mercy
  • My mind boggles at the amount of money they spend on food.
  • Commander of the Faithful being a fearful boggler at a sum. The Haunted House
  • Scattered accounts of Tony Fernandez’s postprison activities boggle the mind. Without Pity
  • His first employers thought a Cajun audience might boggle at a journalist called ‘Wiltfong’.
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  • The perfidiousness of their ruthless attack boggles the mind of decent Americans. Balkinization
  • It boggles my mind how much money it must have cost to set up each base camp.
  • The fact that an anti-war movement even exists, is gaining strength, and dares to have a tint of radical coloring must boggle their minds.
  • Today's post on math-magical thinking is a mind-boggler, with a link to a very cool magic site that will surprise and delight you. Archive 2007-04-01
  • My mind boggles at the amount of work still to do.
  • The dexterity and nimble balance of elite fencers can boggle the mind.
  • That's why my mind boggles when I hear about things like the Roadsworth trial.
  • The mind boggles at the idea.
  • (Why Tony didn't do the same in the Mid-East is a mind-boggler, considering that what he did do has ended his career). Tony Hendra: With Friends Like Democrats, Who Needs Republicans?
  • This feat, sophomore undergraduates performing original English-language Shakespeare in China, combined with my infinite struggle to read, write, and speak in Chinese, boggles the mind. Site-Exchange in Guiyang, Giuzhou University
  • Wan was 15 when she mastered that art, and the mind boggles trying to imagine a teenager with no hands and half an arm managing this feat.
  • This is a notorious contradiction of natural history and it is great fun to drop into conversation as a mind-boggler. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sharon's long standing demand for seven days of total quiet has been so utterly unrealistic it boggles the mind.
  • George went across to introduce himself to the Red Army, an event which boggles the imagination.
  • The dialogue was so hopelessly unfunny that it boggles the mind.
  • He boggled at the thought of swimming in winter.
  • A boggle is a bogey, an unchancy spirit; he lives there.
  • The mind boggles at the possibilities that could be in store for us.
  • League tables for teachers, prize-giving ceremonies for teachers… the mind boggles.
  • The audacity of it boggles the mind.
  • To think that the martian bacteria were very similar to our own is also a mind boggler! New Findings On Alan Hills Meteorite Point to Microbial Life | Universe Today
  • Update Alex sez, "A" more ferocious "internet-edition of boggle is available here, using xmlhttprequest for real-time Massively Multiplayer Online Boggling. - Boing Boing
  • It was these two stories that made me understand 'boggle' and 'mind'. Giving evidence to the Chilcot inquiry, Tony Blair said: “I...
  • What really boggles the mind, though, is the question of why so many women submit applications to date him after they know what he is.
  • Isn't there meant to be a movie about flies of all things, yes horror flick the mind boggles, that is also in 3D .... Shark Attack!
  • To anyone used to shooting the centerfires, the experience of shooting a .17 Rem. for the first time boggles the mind.
  • It boggles the imagination, doesn't it?
  • Eventually, both stories converge in an action-packed finale straight out of the Hollywood playbook (not to mention patently absurd in so many ways that it boggles the mind).
  • The mind boggles when confronted with issues such as income tax law, health service regulations, social welfare entitlements and family law.
  • I see houses being showcased and toured on Channel 4's neverending parade of property programmes and I boggle at the fact that nobody who appears on any of them ever seems to have any stuff.
  • The mind boggles, and so, I imagine, do the eyes.
  • That's regardless of whether or not the 'boggled' media choose to recognise it. John Terry’s sacking as England captain tells us something interesting...
  • The kid boggled, “So if I dig up a lutist, and eat a piece before a gig, I will thra-a-sh!” An Heroic Tale in an Enormous Tomb « A Fly in Amber
  • It boggled the Siberian imagination to think what modern business and technology might accomplish.
  • The mind boggles when I consider where this could lead.
  • Since it was the first request she'd made, they hated to refuse her, yet the idea boggled their minds. On Wings Of Love
  • The mind boggles, as would their's, as should your editors.
  • When respected performers like her take five million dollars from Chanel No.5 to transform into little more than a big-screen Avon Lady, however, the mind truly boggles.
  • But here is what neither Papist nor Puritan, latitudinarian nor precisian, ever boggles or makes mouths at. Kenilworth
  • Imagine what the fiend has done over the course of a year - the mind boggles!
  • The mind boggles at all the other sartorial possibilities - and the associated advertising slogans.
  • The fact that an anti-war movement even exists, is gaining strength, and dares to have a tint of radical coloring must boggle their minds.
  • But then everything in this excerpt is so narrow-minded and wrong, it just boggles the mind that a 31-year-old could have said it.
  • That's why my mind boggles when I see or hear people talking about American Idol.
  • Marlene Dietrich as the Catwoman… the mind boggles.
  • No offense to the other contributors, but from a commercial standpoint, I would definitely have put Scott Westerfeld’s name on the cover, and I’m kind of boggled that they didn’t. Subterranean Magazine To Press « Whatever
  • The concept of a 3D David Letterman boggles the mind.
  • What an impossible job! The mind boggles.
  • Yes, I know the courts will never let this argument stand, but it's the fact that someone is trying to pass this off as a legitimate defense that boggles the mind.
  • The mind boggles at the possibilities that could be in store for us.
  • The very phrase boggles the mind -- although not so much, perhaps, as the fact that of the 3.9 million American children who will be born in the year 2000, at least 70,000 of them are expected to still be alive in 2100. Tomorrow's Child
  • The real boggler for me is the writer who completely misses the emotional landscape of a period, not just by making the characters modern American or British, but by evoking a completely different period–like the author who is writing Elizabethan but her whole affect is Victorian. BOOK VIEW CAFE BLOG » Yes, Things Were Different Then
  • The mind boggles as to why the community was not consulted in the first place.
  • But before we tackle that mind boggler, "In Touch Weekly" senior editor Amy Palmer joins us. CNN Transcript Oct 8, 2009
  • But this bit of scientific jiggery-pokery leaves my mind in an even more boggled state than usual.
  • But the fact that we spend so much money on an unlikely problem that has barely affected us, and then question money to be spent on ill evacuees just boggles the mind.
  • The naming of a culprit by a police force which has not amassed enough evidence to warrant an arrest, never mind charges, is so damaging to fairness and due process that it boggles the mind.
  • There is so much info out there on the net, it boggles the mind when you really think about it!
  • The sheer amount of time and patience it must have taken to painstakingly draw out these complex pieces boggles the mind, which can be said for another series he created from the Surrey Suburban Project.
  • Parlabane's mind, as far as he was concerned, never 'boggled', but it did play host to some peculiar imagery involving just how this injury may have come about. Boiling a Frog
  • The management group's decision still boggled his mind.
  • The good grace with which they face the latest privations makes the mind boggle.
  • What an impossible job! The mind boggles.
  • As for the prison guards, the logistics of putting these shows together are enough to boggle the mind: cutting between feeds in real time, then assembling the rushes into coherent narratives, then weaving those narratives into multistranded, well-paced, hour-long television documentaries. The Guardian World News
  • But what Activision has done with the engine boggles the mind.
  • It boggles the mind to wonder why the producers didn't get a real wrestler like Bill Goldberg (who has a small part playing himself) to portray Jimmy King.
  • Not for the first time, my friends, the mind boggles.
  • Never boggle at a difficulty.
  • Vast distances boggle the mind.
  • It becomes a real mind-boggler and not one for the nonlateral thinker. The Sun
  • She boggled her first attempt at drawing.
  • Then the walk on Friday happened, which kind of boggled my brain because I couldn't believe how much I was doing and still feeling okay! Sheepdip Diary Entry
  • The sheer amount of data makes the mind boggle.
  • The kagu is a one-off, a virtuoso bit of evolution, a bird to baffle and boggle. Times, Sunday Times
  • Setting aside where it leads, a couple of things about that search term boggle me. The gaping silence
  • The mind boggles, and just wants to think about something else instead.
  • The scale of the event boggles the mind and is a measure of the man's imagination and the cast circles of high-rolling friends who answered his invitation.
  • The mind boggles, and there is nothing to suggest that residents could have any input other than those elected members who recently ruined the evening economy by introducing such exorbitant parking charges.
  • The sheer amount of data makes the mind boggle.
  • (How long before all the boggle is used up, I start to wonder.) Discourse.net: Heavy Boots
  • There is so much traffic here the mind boggles.
  • What an impossible job! The mind boggles.
  • The city has few ‘vistas’ that tourists easily identify and the complex of cultural buildings around the Potsdamer Platz boggles the mind.
  • He boggled at the thought of swimming in winter.
  • Sara pallin screamed in her first speach America needs more energy, stupid numnuts, you need to consume less in order to become free from the saudies…drilling a joke there is no oil field that can support a consumer the size of the USA in this hemisphere, believe me they would have found it in the past 40 years…It just mind boggles and frustrates me how dumb people can be running behind this party, how many more hurricanes do you need to understand global warming is real for example…you will have an amount of storms in years to come that go beyond any record, stronger then your saphire simpson scale goes and you still dont see the need to reduce emissions..dum dum …dum Sarah Palin’s Alaskonomics
  • How anybody can call ANY presidency "failed" when it is only 14% of the way through the term boggles my mind. First on the Ticker: RNC Web video targets 'White House in denial'
  • It boggles the mind that it takes so long for repairs.
  • In one mind-boggler, a particle of light seems to "know" what experimenters have in store during a "double slit" experiment. Faster Than What?
  • Do NOT waste time and energy in mincing word armies with those who are sent to boggle our minds and torment our ‘spirit (s) †™ because as I said, there is absolutely NO chance of changing these folks minds, they are sad but true, brain dead. Think Progress » UPDATE: Fox Carolina Reporter Active On White Supremacist Website
  • The fact that an anti-war movement even exists, is gaining strength, and dares to have a tint of radical coloring must boggle their minds.
  • There are so many possibilities for double entendre there; the mind boggles.
  • Josh's mind boggled in the futile effort to penetrate the abstruse complexity of an esoteric form of thinking that was altogether foreign to him.
  • The management group's decision still boggled his mind.
  • This practice, known as kiting, still boggles my mind. Lessons Lernt
  • What boggles the mind, Cynthia, I guess is we can understand anyone being attracted to another faith.
  • It kind of boggles the mind that Camille Grammer, the soon to be ex-wife of Kelsey Grammer--the prolific and talented actor in such hits as... Jill Brooke: The Biggest Mistake Women Make With Alimony
  • His mind boggles at the king's arrogance.
  • And, like Katrina, parts of it kind of boggle the mind. CNN Transcript May 22, 2007
  • I suppose "boggled" might also be called a pre-existing mental condition a majority of Americans have when it comes to the entire concept of "pre-existing" anything, be it cancer, heart disease or hammer-toes. Ellen Snortland: Adjusting Insurance Company Attitudes
  • It boggles the mind that Henry should have been inside a flying saucer.
  • What human behavior boggles the mind of Dr. Phil?
  • The multiple layers of screen mediation on this one kind of boggle the mind, if one feels like thinking critically about postmodernism. Papelbon Dances Again
  • I'll leave that to the activists, and just boggle at the sheer pointlessness.
  • Once, before she was born, her father had found a curious bloated and boggle-eyed fish on the shore.
  • The mind boggles at the possibilities, but the pain, heartache, and loss is still there.
  • And here, he offers offers some geopolitical naivety and moral equivalency that simply boggles the mind.
  • She boggled her first attempt at drawing.
  • We will get to the bottom of that mind-boggler in tonight ` s "Top of the Block. CNN Transcript Aug 24, 2009
  • Over a year after the fact, my mind still boggles that it was ever written.
  • The chair looks comfortable, although the price tag boggles the mind-- that's twice what my car cost! See me in the powerchair! Also postcards, packages, isolation and no GP
  • I’m kind of boggled at the mostly unfavorable reviewer response to Prince Caspian. In Gordath Wood: Writer Patrice Sarath » Prince Caspian — what are the reviewers going on about?
  • Reading the label, and attempting to interpret the mind set of the writer of the label my alter ego is Nino the Mind Boggler, it seems like this should be slapped onto any book published before, say, 1980. The Volokh Conspiracy » Quite a Warning Label
  • The sheer amount of data makes the mind boggle.
  • The dialogue was so hopelessly unfunny that it boggles the mind.
  • It kind of boggles the mind that Camille Grammer, the soon to be ex-wife of Kelsey Grammer--the prolific and talented actor in such hits as Cheers and Frasier--can wave her manicured hand dismissively at a reported $40 million payout and say she wants more for the 14 years she was married to him. Jill Brooke: The Biggest Mistake Women Make With Alimony
  • The framed snapshots of the much loved faraway grandparents, who sent us Puffin books and matching hand-knitted cardigans, were kept in other less starchy rooms, where people might play Boggle or work their way through the VHS set of A Perfect Spy, posted out via the diplomatic bag and passed from household to expat household. A childhood on the move
  • My mind boggles at the amount of money they spend on food.
  • We now have a raft of new ‘universities’ that offer degrees in such a vast range of subjects that the mind boggles!
  • The mind literally boggles as you try to decipher the narrative that might have created this collision of objects.
  • It's only natural that we'd start looking for ‘synergies’, and try to replace ten bloggers with one semi-literate goof in the hopes that readers won't notice. The mind boggles.
  • It boggles the mind that this evil organization prospers as it does.
  • This boggles the mind!
  • Parlabane's mind, as far as he was concerned1 never 'boggled', but it did play host to some peculiar imagery involving just how this injury may have come about. Boiling a frog
  • When I first heardthat Guy Ritchie was going to do a Holmes movie and that the consulting tec was to be played by Robert Downey Jr, my immediate reaction was a kind of boggle-eyed ‘nnnNaah!’ 2009 December « INTERSTELLAR TACTICS
  • Such malevolent megalomania boggles the mind.

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