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[ UK /klˈʌbəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. inclined to club together
    a clubbable man

How To Use clubbable In A Sentence

  • It was not that he was unclubbable. Times, Sunday Times
  • a clubbable man
  • Is this a confirmation, I wonder, of the theory entertained by Mr. Emerson and other philosophers, that woman is not a 'clubbable' animal? France and the Republic A Record of Things Seen and Learned in the French Provinces During the 'Centennial' Year 1889
  • John Tooley is a part-time senior youth worker, who for two nights a week helps vulnerable youngsters - "the ones who don't join the Scouts or other clubs, not being what you'd call clubbable. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • First, it isn't Hobbes's view that the relation between states is characterised as involving a ‘clubbable’ social life, unless we're punning on ‘club’.
  • Those who have worked with him describe him as work-obsessed, ambitious, focused, not particularly clubbable.
  • Others in his sector agree he is notoriously unclubbable. Times, Sunday Times
  • Unmarried, very short, plump early in life, fat later, overdressed, vain, and watchful, Gibbon was easy to make fun of, and though he belonged to Johnson's Club, he was not a clubbable man.
  • For more than two decades, Washington's mainstreamers considered Cheney a rare clubbable Republican—genial, brainy he studied for a Ph.D. in political science, and safe. Notable & Quotable
  • I can't think of any of the current candidates who quite fit the term 'clubbable' (which is perhaps just as well as we need someone who isn't too deep in the club atmopshere). Politicalbetting.com
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