I was once six feet tall, but at 85, I'm now five feet four.
My sister and I are opposites in many ways. She is six feet tall, while I'm five feet four.
Well, duh. He was six feet, six inches tall and built like a brick shithouse.
Gorillas are the largest of the great apes. A mature male may be six feet tall and weigh 400 pounds or more; his enormous arms can span eight feet.
I think we were born 6 feet tall and then started to grow from there. My dad's not particularly tall - only 5 feet, 11 inches - but his mother was almost 6 feet and straight as a ramrod: a German woman who used to scare the hell out of me.
I had a fear of being too tall because my dad is very tall, and both my sisters are very tall. And they're drop-dead gorgeous, but I just didn't know if I, as Storm, wanted to be 6 feet tall, 'cause I feel like that's pretty tall.
So how do theists respond to arguments like this? [The Argument from Evil] They say there is a reason for evil, but it is a mystery. Well, let me tell you this: I'm actually one hundred feet tall even though I only appear to be six feet tall. You ask me for proof of this. I have a simple answer: it's a mystery. Just accept my word for it on faith. And that's just the logic theists use in their discussions of evil.
I wasn't a pretty girl. I was six feet tall at 15, you know.
I've been six feet tall since the sixth grade.
If a wig is funny when it's two feet tall, why not make it three feet tall? Or ten?
I'm six feet tall. No one realizes that because on 'The Daily Show' I'm usually sitting.
I'm really tall - almost six feet - and my features tend to be extreme, especially on TV.
Finn whispered, "What has a head, thorax, and abdomen, but stands six feet tall?" "A snowman?
Since becoming a global star, if I may say so, I feel six feet tall.
A woman is a lot like a refrigerator. Six feet tall, 300 pounds...it makes ice.
When someone walks in and you say "a six-foot-tall man," you miss the opportunity to describe what a six-foot-tall man would look like to your narrator, because how the narrator describes a six-foot-tall man says more about the narrator than about the man.