duckpin

NOUN
  1. a bowling pin that is short and squat by comparison with a tenpin
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How To Use duckpin In A Sentence

  • Tonight, diminished expectations combined with Palin's known-to-be-remarkable charisma made for the speech-making equivalent of putting a champ bowler two feet in front of a set of plastic duckpins. The Garlic
  • The object is to clear opponents out of the way while you knock down two of their duckpins that sit at the far end of the court. FLY FISHING WITH DARTH VADER
  • The mystery woman could be Alice McHugh, a 1938 U.S. and world champion duckpin bowler who died in 1986. Alice Doesn't Live There Anymore
  • Maple Sugar Time is one of those quirky New England customs that defines the region --- like duckpin bowling, dropping Rs when speaking, or passionately rooting for a baseball team that plays 86 seasons between World Series wins. Undefined
  • Two hours later, I convinced everyone to go duckpin bowling, a miniature version of the game featuring tiny, squat pins and little balls that fit in the palm of your hand. I'm Perfect, You're Doomed
  • Yours had better be pristine when I hop into your passenger seat, or I won't go bowl duckpins with you, no sirree. Click It or Ticket
  • She was an avid fan of baseball and basketball, enjoyed duckpin bowling, ceramics and quilt making. The Herald-Mail Online
  • The blast was at a restaurant offering duckpin bowling, which involves smaller balls without holes and mini lanes. The Sun
  • He was a former leader of the Dayton 4-H Club and a longtime church league duckpin bowler. The Herald-Mail Online
  • I want to call them duckpins, but I'm not sure they're even fat enough to qualify. The next excerpt in a theoretically infinite series
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