[
US
/ˈkɑbɫɝ/
]
[ UK /kˈɒblɐ/ ]
[ UK /kˈɒblɐ/ ]
NOUN
- a pie made of fruit with rich biscuit dough usually only on top of the fruit
- a person who makes or repairs shoes
- tall sweetened iced drink of wine or liquor with fruit
How To Use cobbler In A Sentence
- When you arrive, be sure to introduce yourself to this unique part of Texas with a local favorite: black cherry cobbler à la mode.
- 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.
- 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?
- Some, no doubt, find this pretentious old cobblers. Times, Sunday Times
- But cobblers and laundry owners could be in trouble, and tobacco products should be avoided altogether.
- But next day when the cobbler ventured to criticise the legs, the painter came forth from his hiding-place and recommended the cobbler to stick to the shoes -- advice which in the words of the Latin version of the story also has been adopted as a proverb, _Ne sutor ultra crepidam_ ( "Let not the shoemaker overstep his last"). Little Folks (November 1884) A Magazine for the Young
- For dessert, we ordered a peach and huckleberry cobbler with vanilla gelato and four spoons.
- Until then I shall content myself with all those fruit-based American puddings such as cobblers and crisps.
- He represents the Fiend passing up through the market, and chuckling as he listens to the strange oaths of cobbler, maltman, tailor, courtier, and minstrel. Dreamthorp A Book of Essays Written in the Country