How To Use Flibbertigibbet In A Sentence

  • She goes so far as to cultivate the image of a terminal flibbertigibbet.
  • Here, Keaton's la-di-da flibbertigibbet dissolved all of her neurotic mannerisms and simply stood still, gently and lovingly warbling what became the film's essence.
  • In the interim, of course, I was a flibbertigibbet, obsessing on other things.
  • She firmly tells her audience that chivalry and courtliness are about real things, that hypocrites and coy flibbertigibbets are without honour.
  • Danson, as the constantly stoned and seemingly monstrously self-absorbed magazine editor George, gives the show weight and heft, which is hard to see in the first several episodes because George appears to be a flibbertigibbet. Lance Mannion:
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  • He suggested that the PM's often tired appearance might be an advantage compared to Conservative leader David Cameron, who he dismissed as a "flibbertigibbet". Undefined
  • Either she's misusing the word flibbertigibbet or she's endorsing the wrong candidate. Elizabeth Taylor urges primary voters to back Clinton
  • Maria, on the other hand, is described by her fellow nuns as ‘a flibbertigibbet, a will-o'-the-wisp, a clown’.
  • He's a diligent, conscientious person; I'm a flibbertigibbet a will o' the wisp, a clown.
  • In phonaesthesia however, some simple combinations of phonemes (like “fl -” in English) have taken on a degree of meaning in their own right, if not iconic (with “fl -” resembling a sound associated with the flick, flap or flourish, the fluttering flight of the fleeting, flouncy flibbertigibbet,) then at least conventionally symbolic (as with the cluster of words in English associating “gl -” with glistening, glittering glints of gleams we glance or glean.) Notes on Notes
  • Behrman, if you do not care to pose for me, you needn't. But I think you are a horrid old - old flibbertigibbet.
  • She looked at me then and cried, ‘My, you really are a flibbertigibbet!’
  • Very well, Mr. Behrman, if you do not care to pose for me, you needn't. But I think you are a horrid old - old flibbertigibbet.
  • For all the seniors out there that find Elizabeth Taylor still relevant, a flibbertigibbet is basically a chatty gossip. Elizabeth Taylor urges primary voters to back Clinton
  • Joe Versus The Volcano, only one of whom is a self-described "flibbertigibbet" (a sort of antiquated version of the MPDG). How Now Brownpau
  • As if she didn't know that they were off thinking of flibbertigibbets and flirting with things, so that they forgot their tasks!
  • Danson, as the constantly stoned and seemingly monstrously self-absorbed magazine editor George, gives the show weight and heft, which is hard to see in the first several episodes because George appears to be a flibbertigibbet. Ted Danson takes down Boredom on points
  • Instead, Bergman is stuck playing a polite flibbertigibbet, the kind of helpless royal who many would consider scandalous if she wasn't so pure in her personal morality.
  • Hollywood, in 2002, views him as a spoiled child, a ready to raise a fuss flibbertigibbet who can't wait for someone to criticize his vision so he can go goofy on them.
  • But one day Flibbertigibbet -- so Sister Angelica called the little girl from her first coming to the Asylum, and the name clung to her -- was sent to the infirmary in the upper story because of a slight illness; while there she made the discovery of the "Marchioness. Flamsted quarries
  • My Queen Rat has charm and she's a bit of a flibbertigibbet as well!
  • Shakespeare apparently saw a devilish aspect to a gossipy chatterer; he used "flibbertigibbet" in Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day
  • ‘You're talking rubbish,’ said I, incensed that a flibbertigibbet biscuit such as the pink iced ones with white swirls could be held in higher regard than a Rich Tea which, as any fool knows, is a noble biscuit with real dignity.
  • Here, Keaton's la-di-da flibbertigibbet dissolved all of her neurotic mannerisms and simply stood still, gently and lovingly warbling what became the film's essence.
  • Back in the 1960s, when I was but a young flibbertigibbet, there was consternation when The Sunday Times introduced the concept of including a magazine with the newspaper.
  • She is a young flibbertigibbet who inherits her sister's three children after a car accident.

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