bolshie

[ UK /bˈɒlʃi/ ]
NOUN
  1. emotionally charged terms used to refer to extreme radicals or revolutionaries
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use bolshie In A Sentence

  • Those two were unplattied and smecking fit to crack in no time at all, and they thought it the bolshiest fun to viddy old Uncle Alex standing there all nagoy and pan-handled, squirting the hypo - dermic like some bare doctor, then giving myself the old jab of growling jungle-cat secretion in the rooker. Where's the show?
  • She was in a bolshie mood.
  • The character of Seamus Finnan in Vellum has some fairly preachy dialogue of a socialist-pacifist bent, and I am, it has to be said, fairly bolshie myself. Critique From HereNow
  • His story begins in 1972 when Douglas was accosted at a bus stop in Edinburgh by two bolshie 12-year-olds.
  • Katherine Kelly, aka bolshie barmaid Becky Grainger, was certainly flying high after scooping two prizes on the night - Favourite Female for her madcap adventures on the Street and Favourite Couple with on-screen amour Manchester Evening News - RSS Feed
  • ANAMORPH is also woefully subservient to too many overplayed stereotypes- the jaded cop, the personal investment in the case and subsequent suspicion, the bolshie polar-opposite New Partner figure painfully acted by Scott Speedman might I add, and the obligatory Dead Ex-Partner. From a different perspective ANAMORPH might be good. But Simon isnt convinced… | Obsessed With Film
  • Most likely somewhere in between, I guess... but something about the bolshie, self-righteous tone of the question does make this person sound like he/she might be... well, difficult. Nowadays Love Is a Matter of Chance, Matrimony a Matter of Money, and Divorce a Matter of Course
  • This said, I'm no bolshie hero going to court or engaging in ugly confrontations with inspectors.
  • But is this a bolshie minority of stick-in-the-muds who don't like change?
  • Before hand his 'body language' looked anything but 'bolshie', more disorientated and demoralised and trying to screen out the mahem around him. John Terry’s sacking as England captain tells us something interesting...
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy