How to Use for luck in a Sentence
for luck
idiom-
Friday the 13th: a bad day for luck, but a good day for cheap tattoos.
— Victoria Moorwood, The Enquirer, 13 May 2022 -
Yellow is for luck, red is for love and white undies bring peace.
— Marisa Lascala, Good Housekeeping, 25 Oct. 2022 -
Oh, and one more for luck: The new wallpapers look cool, too.
— David Phelan, Forbes, 14 Mar. 2022 -
James believed, instead, in the concept of fors, the Latin word for luck or chance.
— Nathan Solis, Los Angeles Times, 24 July 2022 -
My parents wished so fervently for luck in the New Year.
— Lan Samantha Chang, Vogue, 20 Jan. 2023 -
Ah—your agency comes in the almost-passive search for luck.
— Wired, 9 Aug. 2022 -
Many in Italy and Spain might agree: On December 31, believers slip on red undies for luck and love in the year ahead.
— Vanessa Hua, CNN, 19 Jan. 2023 -
An old-timer had told him that deer sightings bode well and so my father watched and waited, hoping for luck and chance.
— Michael W. Clune, Harper’s Magazine , 10 Apr. 2023 -
An old-timer had told him that deer sightings bode well and so my father watched and waited, hoping for luck and chance.
— Matthew Gavin Frank, Harper's Magazine, 10 Apr. 2023 -
People have been lining up to take selfies with it, and to rub its testicles for luck.
— Valeria Ricciulli, Curbed, 20 Nov. 2021 -
The mother sits at the computer desk, wearing her ruby bracelet for luck.
— Rebecca Curtis, The New Yorker, 9 Nov. 2020 -
Pulling the turkey's wishbone for luck after a meal is a tradition that began in ancient Italy.
— Terry Baddoo, USA TODAY, 17 Nov. 2022 -
Herman Quintero was cracking jokes about the lottery, touching just below his right eye for luck.
— Ambar Castillo, STAT, 24 Mar. 2023 -
The Chinese word for orange closely resembles the words for luck and wealth, making the fruit a popular Lunar New Year gift.
— Samantha Nelson, chicagotribune.com, 31 Jan. 2022 -
This can’t be boiled down to cultural proclivity for luck.
— Jenny Wu, Washington Post, 2 June 2023 -
The holiday, which starts this year on Sunday, Jan. 22, is full of symbolic foods: dumplings for wealth, whole chicken for luck, noodles for longevity.
— Janelle Bitker, San Francisco Chronicle, 17 Jan. 2023 -
The temple maintains a series of shelving units to hold the thousands of maneki neko that visitors have bought, scribbled their names and wishes on and left behind for luck.
— Hanya Yanagihara Kyoko Hamada, New York Times, 10 May 2023 -
Crowds hover perilously close to their hooves to stroke the horses’ hearts for luck, or applaud wildly as the aristocratic jockeys ride them dashingly in and out of palaces.
— James Collard, Robb Report, 25 July 2021 -
The holiday, which is celebrated across multiple countries in east Asia, is about welcoming a new year with hopes for luck and prosperity Out with the old, in with the new!
— Andrea Wurzburger, Peoplemag, 22 Jan. 2023 -
Photos this week showed many students visiting temples to light incense and pray for good results, with some teachers distributing zongzi, or rice dumplings, for luck.
— Jessie Yeung, CNN, 7 June 2023 -
Spread all the luck, prosperity and smiles this year with these cute Lunar New Year cookies — each is hand decorated with red icing for luck and yellow icing for heroism.
— Jacorey Moon, Good Housekeeping, 20 Jan. 2023 -
Competitors and onlookers bet on the outcomes, often invoking Macuilxochitl, god of games, for luck.
— Bridget Alex, Discover Magazine, 16 June 2020 -
Different types of prayer flag ripple everywhere across the landscape like so many ancient antecedents of Christo’s Gates: some white, for the deceased, arranged vertically; others, for luck and health, multicolored and hung horizontally.
— Klara Glowczewska, Town & Country, 8 June 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'for luck.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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