[
UK
/bˈaʊnsɐ/
]
[ US /ˈbaʊnsɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈbaʊnsɝ/ ]
NOUN
- a person whose duty is to throw troublemakers out of a bar or public meeting
How To Use bouncer In A Sentence
- Three hours packed with a quick-fire century, a couple of bouncers, two-thirds of a hat-trick, a dropped catch, several bowled wickets and innumerable fours and sixers.
- They play mini-bouncers, cupids, schoolkids.
- The programme first of all explains how a Bouncer works on fitness in general and in rehabilitation plus other problems such as arthritis.
- Some escaped after a bouncer battered down a partition wall. Times, Sunday Times
- The bouncer very roughly bounced him out of the saloon.
- We had no TV, so we had no idea what a Sobers sweep or a Hall bouncer actually looked like; we were left to interpolate between newspaper stills and glossies from cricket books.
- People in the audience will go to nightclubs and know what bouncers are like, so the cast needs to look real.
- But then a bouncer single-handedly pushes them all back, tipping the crowd three steps down the steps. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
- As for the bouncer, the fast bowler's ultimate weapon in many ways, you generally keep a little bit in reserve.
- Trained as a doorman to national standards, he is teaching the actors restraining techniques and telling clubland anecdotes to familiarise them with a bouncer's world.