On the hallway wall hung a black-and-white photograph of a young woman with penetrating eyes and a mouth too large for her face.
Her recipe for hearty beef stew is mouth-watering, but too much of the rest of this book left a bad taste in my mouth.
Is not Miss Roberts's mouth just a little too wide and Miss Pfeiffer's upper lip a tad twisted?
In the mirror, she looked sharp enough to cut something, hard fixed lines beside her mouth, her eyes too big, her cheekbones jutting like knuckles under her skin, up to her elbows in dirty work, cleaning toilets.
But there's sourness too, around the mouth, as if he can't dispel the taste of his own bile.
Words, in her mouth, always seemed to have one syllable too many.
You know - those creatures that seem like a single block of short-haired muscle, showing too much of the inside of their mouth on the outside, dripping and drooling, but somehow inspiring cooing affection.
In the summer of 1995, locals began to notice that many frogs at their local watering holes were somehow deformed: some were missing legs, others had too many, some had eyes inside their mouth and so, grotesquely, on.
Greenberg should be put under the harsh spotlight of public scrutiny too, instead of being allowed to shoot his mouth off on CNBC or Bloomberg, where his inquisitors are invariably obsequious.
For cancer patients, nutrition is especially important, but many find that they are too tired to cook, or the food tastes bad, or they are too nauseated to eat, or they have painful mouth sores -- or all of the above.
CNN: Cookbook helps make food appetizing for cancer patients
Rathmann, says Wiltsey, is too much of a "humanist" to bad-mouth colleagues, although he is emotional and has been known to raise his voice a few decibels, particularly when he's defending his company.
If the company keeps too much cash on its books, it could itself become a mouth-watering acquisition target.
The eyes narrow and the mouth is awry, one corner twisting into an Elvis curl, though it looks too sour for seduction, let alone song.
Its provincial hotels, like Hilton's or those of lesser groups, such as Jarvis, were never too hard-hit by world events, though foot-and-mouth disease hurt them in 2001.
ECONOMIST: Overseas visitors are flowing in to fill London's hotels
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