out of thin air造句1. I can't simply conjure up the money out of thin air.
2. The little man appeared out of thin air.
3. He had materialized out of thin air; I had not seen or heard him coming.
4. Unfortunately, I can't just conjure up the money out of thin air!
5. I can't come up with £10 000 out of thin air - it'll take a while to find that kind of money.
6. He found rhymes irresistible, and produced them out of thin air, just for the fun of it.
7. An opinion can not be conjured out of thin air - it must be based on something.
8. Ray picks a number out of thin air -- generally below wholesale -- and the deal is done.
9. Your cousin arrived out of thin air.
10. You fashioned hope right out of thin air.
11. His ideas were not pulled out of thin air.
12. The tabloids make up the most ridiculous stories out of thin air.
13. It's nothing but rumors fabricated out of thin air and brazen lies.
14. Credit , of course, will not produce out of thin air.
15. The success of the demo did not come out of thin air.
16. America's aversion toward saving did not out of thin air.
17. It seems like researchers have just pulled the numbers out of thin air.
18. The juice landed on the floor like a red bubbly snake, a bad omen suddenly materializing out of thin air.
19. How can we believe you? What you have said is out of thin air.
20. Where do you imagine I can find £500 - out of thin air ? I'm not a magician!
21. The only remaining option is to have the Fed create new money out of thin air.
22. The magician waved his wand and a rabbit appeared out of thin air.
23. We have seen that it is the creation of money out of thin air that sets in motion boom-bust cycles.
24. And—despite all the hollering we've been hearing from our critics—we're sticking to our plan to create $600 billion out of thin air.
25. As she has alternative identity, she has quick-sighted and skillful hands. Those we see as the real dream, which demostrate modern dancing in real life out of thin air.
26. It is the fall in the pool of real savings that leads to the weakening in the real economy, which in turn causes banks to curtail the expansion of credit out of thin air.