How To Use Cheek by jowl In A Sentence

  • The guests, packed cheek by jowl, parted as he entered.
  • It is cheek by jowl with the small boats that land the fish, and a stone's throw from the market where it is auctioned.
  • Invariably upon these humiliating occasions when Symes dined cheek by jowl with _hoi polloi_ who left their spoons in their cups and departed using a toothpick like a peavy, his thoughts turned to his coming triumph in Crowheart. The Lady Doc
  • The poor lived cheek by jowl in industrial mining towns in Victorian England.
  • So cheek by jowl we drool a common rheum that stultifies not one but all. Archive 2008-04-01
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  • So even right here in the city you can find the most abominable poverty living almost cheek by jowl with these extraordinary lavish wasteful expenditures.
  • Behind the glitzy wodge of luxury apartments and refurbished houses, 35% of the site has been given to social housing: cheap flats for renting or joint ownership, sitting cheek by jowl with ritzier neighbours.
  • So cheek by jowl we drool a common rheum that stultifies not one but all. Ridicule
  • Incomprehensibly twisting lanes of swarming tenements stood cheek by jowl beside the villas of the rich. THEBES OF THE HUNDRED GATES
  • the houses were jumbled together cheek by jowl
  • I was brought up cheek by jowl with technology- right up against it. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • Some are remote from modern civilisation, others survive cheek by jowl with spreading towns and motorways.
  • A lot of seeing seem irrelevant thing, connect cheek by jowl actually.
  • She has to live cheek by jowl with oiks, people with tattoos and stolen videos.
  • All around them, as the car moved slowly on, were warehouses, new and old cheek by jowl together; commission merchants, their produce spilled over the sidewalk; noisy freight yards, with spur-tracks running off to shipping-rooms of all descriptions; occasional empty ground used as dumps, littered with ashes and old tin cans; over all a thousand smells, each more undelectable than the last. V. V.'s Eyes
  • It was incongruous to see a thief sitting there cheek by jowl with the policeman.
  • The poor lived cheek by jowl in industrial mining towns in Victorian England.
  • It was incongruous to see a thief sitting there cheek by jowl with the policeman.
  • Cars and two-wheelers stood cheek by jowl along the sides of the road linking Race Course Road and Avanashi Road, until the parking space was completely full.
  • She and her family have to live cheek by jowl with these people.
  • My house stands cheek by jowl with a hardware shop.
  • Some are remote from modern civilisation, others survive cheek by jowl with spreading towns and motorways.

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