Use "out of tune" in a sentence

1. I sing out of tune.

2. The piano is out of tune.

3. The clarinet was out of tune.

4. My singing is out of tune.

5. This horn is out of tune.

6. It went out of tune very easily.

7. The guitar was badly out of tune.

8. Many of the notes are out of tune.

9. I'm afraid the piano is out of tune.

10. I always sing out of tune, you see.

11. The President is out of tune with public opinion.

12. The choir was distinctly out of tune in places.

13. The choir was ( singing ) distinctly out of tune in places.

14. 29 The President is out of tune with public opinion.

15. The peace campaigners were probably out of tune with most Britons.

16. The violin and the piano seem to be out of tune.

17. Li The reason is very I sing out of tune, you see.

18. The piano is badly out of tune and jangles on my ears.

19. Her theories were out of tune with the scientific thinking of the time.

20. Mother says she can't stand to teach piano with it out of tune.

21. The beds on Disturbed are all out of tune, too taut or too loose.

22. The definition of Cacophony means sounds that are loud, and irritating and out of tune

23. I don't understand how anyone so musical can hum so out of tune with himself.

24. He finds himself heading a rump party largely out of tune with his own views.

25. Download Autotune for free on your PC and fix your samples that are out of tune

26. Being a centrally administrated area it could hardly afford to be out of tune with Delhi .

27. Sorley was deeply religious in the philosophical sense but always remained out of tune with conventional belief.

28. The frets are quite thin as well and it doesn't seem to go out of tune that much.

29. Upon comparison, the first out -of -tune parameter that is matched within the scanning order table is addressed.

30. Everyone was singing a different song out of tune and taking no notice where they were throwing the water.

31. Their guitar was missing strings, it was completely out of tune, but they made up for it with their smiles.

32. By the twentieth century, however, republican rhetoric quieted; most Colons were increasingly out of tune with the more liberal political discourse of the m é tro-pole.

33. 1932, Aldous Huxley, Brave New World: The roses were in bloom, two nightingales soliloquized in the Boskage, a cuckoo was just going out of tune among the lime trees.

34. ‘A grass-chomping, Bleating, Lakeland sheep is set to become the star of a series of books written and illustrated by a local author.’ ‘He slurred words, intentionally sang out of tune, bleated like a sheep, laughed at himself and made up nonsensical lines.’

35. ‘A grass-chomping, Bleating, Lakeland sheep is set to become the star of a series of books written and illustrated by a local author.’ ‘He slurred words, intentionally sang out of tune, bleated like a sheep, laughed at himself and made up nonsensical lines.’

36. Are not the taxes of these Jem Baggses, these wandering minstrels, the "only rates uninvidious in the levy, ungrudged in the assessment?" Where the intent is so unequivocally kindly, is it not gross and unfeeling to suggest in the modest orchestra a questionable chord, a cracked reed, a cornet out of tune?

37. Absurd (adj.) "plainly illogical," 1550s, from French Absurde (16c.), from Latin absurdus "out of tune, discordant;" figuratively "incongruous, foolish, silly, senseless," from ab-"off, away from," here perhaps an intensive prefix, + surdus "dull, deaf, mute," which is possibly from an imitative PIE root meaning "to buzz, whisper" (see susurration)

38. Absurd (adj.) "plainly illogical," 1550s, from French Absurde (16c.), from Latin Absurdus "out of tune, discordant;" figuratively "incongruous, foolish, silly, senseless," from ab-"off, away from," here perhaps an intensive prefix, + surdus "dull, deaf, mute," which is possibly from an imitative PIE root meaning "to buzz, whisper" (see susurration)