[
UK
/kˈɒbəl/
]
[ US /ˈkɑbəɫ/ ]
[ US /ˈkɑbəɫ/ ]
VERB
-
repair or mend
cobble shoes - pave with cobblestones
NOUN
- rectangular paving stone with curved top; once used to make roads
How To Use cobble In A Sentence
- He never complained, except when he occasionally slipped on muddy cobblestones.
- The group had cobbled together a few decent songs.
- Even if an agreement is cobbled together it will not please everyone.
- You can walk the cobbled streets, visit the house where they lived and take a peep inside the tiny garden room where they studied. The Sun
- Life in the little house behind the cobbler's shop was not calm. HISTORY PLAY: The Lives and After-life of Christopher Marlowe
- A delicious dinner of ham, fried potatoes, hot corn bread, fresh butter, wild bee honey, and huckleberry cobbler is served.
- More than one captain made up his mind then and there that his "cobble" or his "mule," as they term the different classes of boats, would remain in the harbour till the storm had passed. Dracula
- Chefs zigzag in formation over the cobbles, disappearing through a warren of doors with bread baskets and trays of millefeuille. Times, Sunday Times
- So, much as I’m weary of western politicians who couldn’t tell the Ka’ba from a peach cobbler going on about how extremists are “perverting” Islam — how the hell do they know? — this article, which got its author suspended from his radio talk show hosting job for its claim that “Islam is a terror organization,” is truly, profoundly stupid. Excommunicated from the Ummah?
- Were here, announced Jace as the smooth roll of wheels over pavement turned to the jounce of cobblestones. Cassandra Clare: The Mortal Instrument Series