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binger

[ US /ˈbɪŋɝ/ ]
[ UK /bˈɪnd‍ʒɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone addicted to crack cocaine

How To Use binger In A Sentence

  • Relaxing, in amusement at her unwonted altruism of motive, she had drawn her moleskin coat more closely around her, and settled back to wait the other woman's pleasure in returning to the bright warmth that the pale-orange ribbon of light, wavering upon the swaying platform, harbingered. Undesirables
  • Hi, my name is Mike, and I'm a repeat author binger. Have You Ever Binge-Read An Author?
  • It's just that its call is the harbinger of spring - a signal to start chucking chlorine into the swimming pool.
  • Why should the bingers be allowed to spoil things for everyone else?
  • Insiders say that rumblings behind the scenes at ABC's ‘Nightline’ are harbingers of possible dramatic news about the show's future.
  • His fondness for chromaticism was such that Schoenberg suspected he would soon join the ranks of the atonalists, but for Reger chromaticism was a means of expanding the resources of tonality, not a harbinger of its imminent collapse.
  • Already, over unknown trails and chartless wildernesses, were the harbingers of the steel arriving, — fair-faced, blue-eyed, indomitable men, incarnations of the unrest of their race. “The Kipling of the Klondike”: Naturalism in London's Early Fiction
  • Was that a harbinger of things to come? The Collins History of the World in the 20th Century
  • This proved a harbinger for the summer, the wettest in 100 years. Times, Sunday Times
  • Consumer and business confidence are plunging as a harbinger of a sharp slowdown in economic growth next year. Times, Sunday Times
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