Examples of using "Sıska" in a sentence and their english translations:
What's the skinny?
Tom is skinny.
You look skinny.
- Tom is too skinny.
- Tom is too thin.
I think Tom is skinny.
That boy is skinny.
Being skinny is unhealthy.
Tom certainly is skinny.
My son is too skinny.
I never was skinny.
Tom is still skinny.
They're skinny.
Once you become aware that you have a bias,
My son is way too skinny.
Tom never was skinny.
- Tom is thin, isn't he?
- Tom is skinny, isn't he?
I was a scrawny kid.
- I don't think Tom is skinny.
- I don't think that Tom is skinny.
Tom is a skinny teenager.
- I know Tom is skinny.
- I know that Tom is skinny.
He was awfully skinny.
Tom is really skinny, isn't he?
- Tom is quite thin, isn't he?
- Tom is pretty skinny, isn't he?
Tom is very skinny, isn't he?
- The dog is brown, small, and thin.
- The dog is brown, small, and skinny.
I'm not as skinny as I used to be.
Tom says I'm too skinny.
Tom said that Mary was skinny.
Tom isn't as skinny as he used to be.
First of all, you don't have to remind me that I'm skinny.
Tom has skinny legs.
I recoiled when I saw how gaunt she had become.
If you want to get skinny, you should stop grazing between meals.
Tom doesn't know the difference between thin and scrawny.
I wonder if Tom is still skinny.
- Tom told me that he thought Mary was skinny.
- Tom told me he thought Mary was skinny.
- Tom told me he thought that Mary was skinny.
- Tom told me that he thought that Mary was skinny.
He has a scraggly beard and a bum leg.
Tom isn't skinny.
Santa Claus is usually drawn as roly-poly. He is almost never skinny.
Tom is awfully skinny.
How can a skinny person like you eat so much?
I wonder why Tom is so thin.