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bollocks

[ US /ˈbɔɫɔks/ ]
[ UK /bˈɒləks/ ]
VERB
  1. make a mess of, destroy or ruin
    the pianist screwed up the difficult passage in the second movement
    I botched the dinner and we had to eat out

How To Use bollocks In A Sentence

  • He "doesn't give a bollocks" about hitting 60 his age at the time of recording the album, 58 ½, features prominently on the album cover artwork and feels more content in what he calls his "dotage" than in pretty much any period of his life. Evening Standard - Home
  • Can we please call an end to this essentialist blood and soil I'm more Welsh than you bollocks from the Welsh-bashers? Labour: no presence at the Eisteddfod
  • Is it one ‘ell’ or two ‘ells’ in bollocks? on March 22, 2009 at 7: 51 pm | Reply Howard Cross & Rude « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • Yeah well bollocks to you too mate!
  • Your lyrics are complete bollocks; they don't actually mean anything, do they?
  • They completely bollocksed up the game.
  • She had also finally told Tearlach that if he again raised the subject of bollocks or pillicocks in her presence she would have him whipped.
  • Oh, we can give them hot spas and massage rooms and nookie huts and all that bollocks, but in the long run no one is going to do the nasty, insert the portion, prise open the clam, heat up the sausage or cleave the bearded monster with the one-eyed lovesnake unless they are completely arseholed! ' Dead Famous
  • Yeah well bollocks to you too mate!
  • And we've all been agonizing for the past week about whether or not a weird political mutation called Nick Griffin is really Public Enemy Number One, having been ordained as such by the multi-culti, metrosexual, arty-farty literati and Auntie Beeb's Lord High Inquisitor David Dumblebollocks, because Griffin insists that a tribe known as the English still actually exists in England and is worthy of representation in Parliament. John Terry’s sacking as England captain tells us something interesting...
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