When Julia sips the drink during a demonstration, she turns into a huge hairy monster named Harriet Hyde that scares the living daylights out of most of the people around her, even though she is harmless and friendly to most.
32.
But try to find a conservative this summer, especially one looking for a bigger job, who isn't reading " Jurassic Park " over a bullhorn and warning that liberals have been cloned and are scaring the living daylights out of people.
33.
So do they really need make-up ? ( " the wife does-otherwise she'll scares the living daylights out of any callers to our door " )-- talk ) 23 : 52, 1 August 2015 ( UTC)
34.
It was like crossing into an evil Oz _ in what seemed like seconds, a foot of snow ate buildings, obliterated roads, and scared the living daylights out of me . This was no delicate sprinkle to marvel at from the warm side of a bay window.
35.
Friends also call Stahl " a softy " when it comes to her family _ husband Aaron Latham, a magazine journalist and screenwriter, whose bouts of depression before seeking medical help scared the living daylights out of his wife, and daughter Taylor, now a senior in college.
36.
I ran for president, my fellow Americans, because I thought national politics had become too much rhetoric and too little action; because I got sick and tired of people calling each other names and trying to demonize their opponents and trying to scare the living daylights out of people and convince people that their opponents were no good.
37.
Said Dukakis campaign manager Susan Estrich, " The symbolism was very powerful . . . you can't find a stronger metaphor, intended or not, for racial hatred in this country than a black man raping a white woman . . . . I talked to people afterward . . . . Women said they couldn't help it, but it scared the living daylights out of them ."
38.
The idiom is now generally used only as part of a wider expression to express intensity in a negative manner, most commonly in the form " to scare the living daylights out of someone " or " to beat the living daylights out of someone . " It has even taken on a far more humane, even affectionate tone in the phrase " hug the living daylights " ( out of someone, passionately to the point of presumed asphyxiation ).
39.
A reviewer for the " New York Observer " was more favorable, calling it " an effective thriller that sets out to scare the living daylights out of even the most skeptical viewer and delivers in spades . " Mark Harris of About . com gave a mostly positive review, writing that " The attractiveness of the package and the steady pace at which it doles out the action more than make up for the character shortcomings in one of the best animals-run-amok horror movies in recent memory ."