Use "dad" em uma frase
dad frases de exemplo
dad
1. “You and your dad are just two men
2. I always wanted a pet bird growing up but Dad said they wouldn’t have survived the winter
3. I wasn’t planning on having drinks with these two, not if my dad was waiting for me tonight
4. My parents never told me about this, of course, until I was fifteen, but I remember Mom being really afraid that Dad wouldn’t come home during those days
5. Dad said that only a monster would raise his fist toward a woman
6. Dad said that only a weird, sad man picks up prostitutes
7. I tried to be a good person like my dad was
8. This is where my Dad is killing himself
9. Dad lets the bread roll from his fingers onto a pile of clothes
10. I lean to pick it up, but Dad puts a hand on my shoulder
11. Dad waves a hand dismissively, pulling the sheets up to his mouth and coughing mucus into them
12. “Did you shoot him? Fuck, Dad!” The man’s holding his stomach, just below his chest
13. “Your dad okay where he is?”
14. My dad is…
15. “I’m so sorry about your dad
16. Micah’s dad spent a lot of the day sitting watching the old “bunny ears TV” he got from the attic
17. Micah’s dad would sit Indian-style in his room, leaning in close to the TV
18. Micah used to sit in his mom’s lap but didn’t like the way his dad sat
19. When Micah got up, he saw his dad was up, too
20. His dad laughed at him, but Micah was able to duck out of the way before he could ruffle up his hair
21. Dad didn’t even try very hard to get him, though
22. Toby’s dad would have said that Raj’s room looked like a crime scene
23. The first time she said it, Mom and Dad just sent her to her room
24. Dad drove ten miles over the speed limit the whole way
25. It’s weird but I feel like I should remember more about my dad but it’s only some small things that stay vivid in my head while the rest kind of fades away
26. I remember my dad had that kind of booming laugh that came deep from the gut
27. Maybe my dad wasn’t being careful
28. Then my dad would just kill me
29. Fast, the great super spy, is afraid of his dad,” she teased
30. He doesn’t have a comeback, though, because “Dizzie” is Dizzie’s real name—her dad was a jazz fan
31. “I don’t care about your dad! This Chip is more important than your life and all the things that happen in it
32. “Hey dad,” he called as he dropped his backpack onto the floor and started digging around in the fridge for something to eat
33. Dad is sighing and looking listless
34. For a moment Johnny thought that his dad had found out that Johnny was out all night
35. “I know dad,” Johnny said as Henry searched for his next words
36. Johnny often wondered how his dad would feel if he ever found out that Johnny was a super spy and that he was concealing so many things from him
37. Johnny imagined that his dad would be crushed, and it was a moment that Johnny wanted to do his best to spare him from ever having to go through
38. “Thanks dad,” Johnny said, mostly because he didn’t really know what else to say
39. He wanted to say that his dad didn’t have anything to worry about, that Johnny was not only doing fine, but thriving in his newfound profession
40. His dad always said that, but if Johnny never helped with the dishes, quite frankly, they would never get done
41. His dad tended to forget things like that
42. "Did you see that, Dad? I was flying!"
43. My dad was always active in the village I grew up in and I spent a lot of my younger years shadowing him as he took tickets at various gates or rushed around using me as a ‘gofer’ … thank goodness I wasn’t a shy child, that would have been hell!
44. My dad was a sailor back in the 1940s and he made his own tattoo
45. the door and asked for my Dad, I was imagining what I called the Autocopter
46. It was just after Dad retired
47. Once hostilities ceased, Dad went to visit Bob’s family – his own having been bombed out during the Blitz – and fell in love with Bob’s sister … by this time he had decided that he wanted to train as a teacher – there was a big demand for men to do that after the war, you know
48. I arrived a few years later by which time Dad had got himself a reputation as a reliable maths teacher and, when I was seven, we moved down to Plymouth
49. Uncle Bob married about the same time as Mum and Dad, but after a half-hearted attempt at farming here in England, he gave up and they emigrated to Australia
50. A couple of times Dad tried to get them to move out of the city and come down to us, but they never would