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How To Use Jibe In A Sentence

  • Her story didn't jibe with the witnesses'account.
  • She jibed constantly at the way he ran his business.
  • Many nights, I have cried myself to sleep over such cruel jibes. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘It's meant to be’ jibes Danilo as he storms off the Westmorland Hall stage with such splendid melodrama he almost pushes conductor Wyn Davies into his illustrious players.
  • There is also some automatic service nike mad jibe shoes without anybody in the hotel toilet.
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  • Unlike many other politicians, he refuses to indulge in cheap jibes at other people's expense.
  • And adding to that he gets the 'paedo' jibes from the A block when he comes to the City Through the seasons before us..
  • Perhaps, ironically, all those cheap jibes helped him here. Times, Sunday Times
  • The title is in honour of Australia’s first female deputy Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, jibe from the enlightened Mr Heffernan – stating she was unfit for leadership because she was” deliberately barren”. Archive 2008-09-01
  • ‘It's hugely different to writing to a feature film, where you're basically whitewashing it for the producers,’ he jibes.
  • Broad, rude, crude and offensive were just a few of the criticisms levelled at this scatological sitcom, but the show had the perfect response to such highbrow jibes: ratings.
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • She was tired of his cheap jibes.
  • He made a monkey gesture at the crowd as he left the field, a reference to the jibes that had been directed at him. Times, Sunday Times
  • This jibes with research showing that women are physiologically and emotionally more sensitive to unsatisfactory relationships.
  • Read a couple of corporate histories -- even though they are blatant hagiographies -- and see which one jibes more with your set of core values.
  • It's funny, I was surprised to read that you've never creamed butter by hand -- something about your style and the pleasure you take in drawing out the lusciousness of simple things doesn't jibe with that. Like a lullaby
  • My own experiences didn't jibe with anything these family units went through.
  • The jibes that he was nothing more than a gaffe-prone, tub-thumping populist hurt because they were perilously close to the truth.
  • Unlike many other politicians, he refuses to indulge in cheap jibes at other people's expense.
  • A gype, a glaik and a galoot were all commonly hurled jibes in our house, a home filled with tomfoolery and japes well beyond the time when we should all have grown up and known better.
  • It is certainly fodder for cynical jibes about leopards and spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was his fatuous, smirky tone and insubstantial jibes.
  • Similarly, if I'm in public practice, and they do something that doesn't jibe with my policies, I'm going to change my policies.
  • Only the dowdy daughter, Martha, treats him with kindness, teaching him to read and shielding him occasionally from her siblings' harshest jibes.
  • The cheerful sailor crept forward and jibed over the foresail as Charley put the helm to starboard and we swerved to the right into the San Joaquin. Charley's Coup
  • Always glowing whenever she hits a stage or screen, the blond, round-cheeked Ebersole has an infallible instinct for jollying a melody that jibes seamlessly with what Weinstein is doing as he rapidly saws away and as Firth and Hubbard fill their breaks with matching virtuosity. David Finkle: First Nighter: Genius Jazz Violinist Aaron Weinstein Meets Brilliant Jazz Singer Christine Ebersole in Dual Birdland Triumph
  • The self-referential jibes and parody elements work well, as do the innumerable anime in-jokes.
  • Your statement doesn't jibe with the facts.
  • I may come across as confident, but cruel jibes left my self-esteem in tatters. The Sun
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • These terms jibe nicely with Mr. Putin's own rhetoric of threats and fear. Our Struggle Against Tyranny in Russia
  • During the years when the elephant jibe was rife, microbial genetics was at the forefront of molecular biology.
  • The standard reply to the Work at Tescos” jibe is “Well if you were a manager at Tescos you would have bankrupted them years ago” on January 1, 2010 at 3: 17 pm Sherriff Roscoe. If Carlsberg Made Justice Secretaries………… « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • If you're dealt four aces, that doesn't make you necessarily a great poker player, Romney jibed. Can GOP's new front-runner Rick Perry take the heat?
  • He made several cheap jibes at his opponent during the interview.
  • And as a final jibe he remarked that it was always sad to see a politician at the end of his career thrashing around for an issue.
  • She also said taunts and jibes about her old, unnatural look had been upsetting. The Sun
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • Are these cruel jibes really justified, do I really set out to shock? Times, Sunday Times
  • People make fat jibes and I feel like leaving it all behind. The Sun
  • I'd hoped to put the vignette on the web when it was done, but it doesn't jibe at all with AuthorityJack.
  • He made several cheap jibes at his opponent during the interview.
  • It's not like you have to share the office space with someone who's views don't jibe with yours, so what's the point?
  • He went bye with a waff of wind in his plaiding, and his haunch-man as he passed at a discreet distance got the double share of jibe and glunch from the mariners. John Splendid The Tale of a Poor Gentleman, and the Little Wars of Lorn
  • As a result he not only arrived on time but he also avoided the usual cheap jibes that we journalists are wont to make about ministerial limousines. Times, Sunday Times
  • The designation APG-63 (V) 3 for the airborne radar in the F-15 Eagle fighter doesn't seem to jibe with the table that says G designates a Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • And while your whole jibe is aimed at business and rocking out your career life, what if your question of “What am I afraid of?” was applied to relationships? I want to join Fight Club | Johnny B. Truant
  • There were thousands of complaints about his cruel jibe, so it was no surprise to see he was on his best behaviour this week. The Sun
  • Martin Ramin for The Wall Street Journal Hand-scrimshawed burgee buckle For the Salty Dog This hand-scrimshawed burgee buckle jibes well with a canvas belt, salt-faded chinos and a simple pique polo. Shoot From the Hip
  • For years the jibe of 'choker' had hounded him - he whose nerves cannot take the heat.
  • Why not email me your gushing and unconditional chorizo-breathed praise/snidey, green-eyed jibes for this team of all the talents/team with one extremely well-developed talent on barney. [email protected]. World Cup 2010 live blog: 8 July
  • Politically speaking, his jibes were right on target.
  • This hasn't faded: he jibed in his most recent interview that he always aims to "outfox the media. Johann Hari: Don't Be Fooled, Many Brits Will Cringe at the Royal Wedding Frenzy
  • Their jibes will soon die down when they find somebody else to talk about. The Sun
  • A little craft behind them, with two men, jibed over and turned bottom up. THE ONE THOUSAND DOZEN
  • Tight dark jeans don't usually jibe with the seaside, but her top's bright print and floaty cut make this outfit just summery enough.
  • So McCain assiduously is courting economic and social conservatives, some of them skeptics who remember his jibes from before. McCain firm on Iraq war despite cost to candidacy
  • Are these cruel jibes really justified, do I really set out to shock? Times, Sunday Times
  • The jib or projecting arm of a crane probably derives from gibbet, and gibe and gybe are often written jibe.
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • There were thousands of complaints about his cruel jibe, so it was no surprise to see he was on his best behaviour this week. The Sun
  • Sandra stayed at home, away from the taunts and jibes of her white schoolfellows, and illicitly befriended the children of the family's black nanny.
  • But your wife is making cruel jibes. The Sun
  • Jibes such as Taranto's should not pass as journalism and should not warrant "our" attention. The Reality Check
  • Jibes about mothers-in-law were kept out of the script.
  • A beer and a cigarette from a smirking, toothless porter ease the immediate pain, while jibes from my travelling companions put my huffs and puffs into perspective.
  • Whilst they give their wives too much liberty to gad abroad, and bountiful allowance, they are accessory to their own miseries; animae uxorum pessime olent, as Plautus jibes, they have deformed souls, and by their painting and colours procure odium mariti, their husband's hate, especially, — [6280] cum misere viscantur labra mariti. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The groundbreaking Sicilian work loses all sense of tragedy in Christ Church's shambolic production, which even manages to ruin Pirandello's subtle jibes at traditional theatre.
  • As a result he not only arrived on time but he also avoided the usual cheap jibes that we journalists are wont to make about ministerial limousines. Times, Sunday Times
  • No matter, I have taken his fat jibe on the chin. The Sun
  • Our comics generally avoid preachiness of any kind, unless it's something petty like Rob's jibe at "Twilight," for example. The 'Riffs Interview: 'CYANIDE & HAPPINESS's' Dave McElfatrick tackles visas, viscera & American humor
  • The compère jibed back ‘Oh, so you are are a futurologist as well?’
  • She was tired of his cheap jibes.
  • Such a throwaway jibe reputedly once caused Phelps to fall out with school friends for years; Parry, a big, bluff Liverpudlian, will laugh it off more easily.
  • He is good with a political attack or jibe, which is appealing to voters trying to find the magic trick to beating an incumbent. Slate Articles
  • There was much satisfaction in these stories: at last, the Newfoundlanders had found a vessel for the jibes that had taunted them for years.
  • Anyone who descends to such cheap jibes with nothing more substantial to say is just making himself ridiculous.
  • Appearing before an audience at the University of New Mexico that cheered at virtually every jibe at Obama, McCain unloaded on his Democratic rival for everything from what he called his propensity to raise taxes and desire to impose a government-run health care system to his purported waffling on issues and his "eager" participation in a "corrupt" earmark system. Top Stories - Google News
  • Fierce jests about the Scotch who came to make their fortune off their richer neighbors, about their clannishness and their canniness, and their poverty and their pride, and still lower and coarser jibes about other supposed peculiarities were then still as current as the popular crows of triumph over the French and other similar antipathies; and Kirsteen's advent was attended by many comments of the kind from the sharp young Londoners to whom her accent and her slower speech, and her red hair and her ladyhood were all objects of derision. Kirsteen: The Story of a Scotch Family Seventy Years Ago
  • Aaaand, just like the "omg, 90% of the Chrysler dealerships closed were owned by Republicans" garbage, this fun little math jibe is total crap. Polls: Obama being judged for actions, not promises
  • The 19 novels on the list represented, Sexton jibed, ‘a curious incident of authors missing’.
  • During the race, Tom Droescher, working as the spinnaker trimmer, was swept overboard during a jibe and landed on his back in the 45-degree waters of Puget Sound.
  • But that doesn't jibe with your partisan rantings.
  • People make fat jibes and I feel like leaving it all behind. The Sun
  • Nor could I have dreamed the heteroclite crewmen I had met aboard Tzadkiel's ship, nor the jibers; and yet both had come from Briah, even as I; and Tzadkiel had not scrupled to take them into his service. The Urth of the New Sun
  • Within three years of that jibe, a bribery scandal forced him to resign in disgrace.
  • The torn and dirty breeches, sackcloth shirt, and tangled hair did not exactly jibe with the mental image she had formed of the prim and sharply dressed servant's master.
  • But their working habits didn't jibe: Godrich constantly wanted to press forward, but the Strokes like to labour over every sound.
  • Many nights, I have cried myself to sleep over such cruel jibes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Do so, and the crowd goes wild; fail, and you face the dismissive jibes of the throwdown commentator. Times, Sunday Times
  • They bickered constantly and sniped at each other with abrasive, even caustic, jibes, but Drake made a valiant effort to stop himself short of physical violence.
  • Φχρμ-χχύα. dici - tur veneficium, quo letalia pharmaca vel philtra mifcentur, & alicui cdcnda vel bi - co reliqui i MSS. & priores Editt. omnes miniis redlc exljibentj ' Suidae Lexicon, Græce & Latine
  • It has also suffered jibes that the whole thing is a massive fix. The Sun
  • The midfielder (right) says his side must ignore jibes about their massive financial losses and use their strengths. The Sun
  • A sail blows off the foredeck and a spinnaker drum jams so they can't jibe on the downwind leg.
  • But your wife is making cruel jibes. The Sun
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • A beer and a cigarette from a smirking, toothless porter ease the immediate pain, while jibes from my travelling companions put my huffs and puffs into perspective.
  • The person who brings this out in most women is that television presenter who had the mean little whiney, rebarbative jibes that suited her well.
  • No matter, I have taken his fat jibe on the chin. The Sun
  • It has also suffered jibes that the whole thing is a massive fix. The Sun
  • Well, come the sixth day I guess, at evenin 'arter I'd done all my work, and was a settin' on the railin 'rother carelessly, the boom jibed and struck me on the top of my head, and the first I knew I was pitched head first into the brine. Chains and Freedom: Or, The Life and Adventures of Peter Wheeler, a Colored Man Yet Living. A Slave in Chains, a Sailor on the Deep, and a Sinner at the Cross
  • Lord Ashdown, the former Liberal Democrat leader, said party members were "furious" at what he described as "appallingly personal" jibes against the Deputy Prime Minister. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • The after leach hollowed, the sail emptied and jibed, and the boom, sweeping with terrific force across the boat, carried the angry correspondent overboard with a broken back. THE ONE THOUSAND DOZEN
  • I may come across as confident, but cruel jibes left my self-esteem in tatters. The Sun
  • ‘It's just journalists who are paid to write that stuff,’ Kadyrov jibes, naming one famous reporter who he believes is in the pay of the rebels.
  • London, Sep 1 (IANS) More than two years after a 'poppadom' jibe against her caused global outrage, Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty has announced plans to "dish out the poppadoms" to Britons. Bollywood Entertainment News | India
  • We stood at the public bar and demanded schooners, copping the jeers, sexual jibes and gropes of the regulars.
  • Cue the wingnuts to claim that this mild political jibe is hate speech. Reid takes dig at Palin in reelection launch
  • During the race, Tom Droescher, working as the spinnaker trimmer, was swept overboard during a jibe and landed on his back in the 45-degree waters of Puget Sound.
  • Even way back then the great steel hulks we slid past had their quota of sectarian jibes daubed crudely on the ferrous red ship plates.
  • A sail blows off the foredeck and a spinnaker drum jams so they can't jibe on the downwind leg.
  • Jibes might even make it harder for the new frontman to moderate his ramstam tendency.
  • Sandra stayed at home, away from the taunts and jibes of her white schoolfellows, and illicitly befriended the children of the family's black nanny.
  • Efforts to pin down the exact nature of jibe and jest have challenged pundits, professional fools, antic clowns, studious gagmen, comedians of every kind and medium.
  • He claims to be very liberal, but when he's voting it just doesn't jibe with what he says.
  • Whenever the band got some coverage in music bible the NME, it was packed with sarcasm and cheap jibes.
  • Barnes then jibed, ‘Are you getting hot for the next one - the humanitarian attack on Pyongyang?’
  • George Will is a great recycler, despite his jibes at silly liberal environmentalism.
  • It was him who helped me find my confidence and put those years of cruel jibes behind me. The Sun
  • Giving and taking jibes and insults is very much part of being a footie fan; usually it's fun.
  • More than two years after a 'poppadom' jibe against her caused global outrage, Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty has announced plans to 'dish out the poppadoms' to Britons. India eNews
  • During the years when the elephant jibe was rife, microbial genetics was at the forefront of molecular biology.
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • A sail blows off the foredeck and a spinnaker drum jams so they can't jibe on the downwind leg.
  • 'No doubt he'll give me the chance to fight him again,' he jibed, tongue in cheek.
  • We took in topsail and staysail, dropped the main peak, and as we got abreast of the principal wharf jibed the mainsail. Charley's Coup
  • 'poppadom' jibe against her caused global outrage, Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty has announced plans to dish out the poppadoms to Britons. Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • The singer and actress admits that conducting any romance has become almost impossible due to the jibes about her taste in younger men.
  • He's one of those little black gnomes from Brittany," jibed Naughtie at his sparring partner. Hugh Muir's diary
  • It is certainly fodder for cynical jibes about leopards and spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • I do not believe in unilateral disarmament, but I do believe the truth-telling jibe is always mightier than the partisan grunt. Think Progress » Malkin Doesn’t Understand How Congress Works
  • Now she has knocked the cruel jibes on the head as she bids to book a place at this summer's Olympics. The Sun
  • April 10th, 2009 12: 37pm stanley Jerusalem only the gelt is the problem to getting there - the funt does not buy much these days, so I will have to suffer the jibes of the punctuaters as I drown in the lonly sea of common sense alone - well more or less:) On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • I've asked around about this quite a bit in the last few days and what seems to emerge is that the "accion" usage tends to show up in print, but nobody actually SAYS it (which jibes with my experience). Feliz d�a de Acci�n de Gracias
  • I think this jibes with Xyu's recent contact with the Transducer which, as far as I can tell, is the most recent contact we have on record.
  • Cameron's office defended the prime minister, saying the jibe was a humorous remark referencing an insurance advertisement. The Seattle Times
  • And fans were still aiming the jibe at him when he boarded the team bus 40 minutes after the final whistle. The Sun
  • Do so, and the crowd goes wild; fail, and you face the dismissive jibes of the throwdown commentator. Times, Sunday Times
  • He made a monkey gesture at the crowd as he left the field, a reference to the jibes that had been directed at him. Times, Sunday Times
  • She also said taunts and jibes about her old, unnatural look had been upsetting. The Sun
  • It doesn't jibe with the image that a lot of Americans have about this country.
  • She also said taunts and jibes about her old, unnatural look had been upsetting. The Sun
  • He made several cheap jibes at his opponent during the interview.
  • It's an additional piece of information refuting Atkins-Taubes that happens to jibe with the controlled studies and the government surveys.
  • How does the rise of the big-box-booksellers jibe with the supposed decline in reading?
  • Sometimes the jibes spilt over into rough stuff, like shoving when he queued for the water-fountain or hard scragging at football. At Swim, Two Boys
  • And the sample menus included in the back of Dr. Atkins's book are of no help because they don't jibe with the instructions in the text.
  • The cheerful sailor crept forward and jibed over the foresail as Charley put the helm to starboard and we swerved to the right into the San Joaquin. Charley's Coup
  • They also make jibes about the poor tourists who get a little sunburnt trying to get a tan. The Sun
  • It was him who helped me find my confidence and put those years of cruel jibes behind me. The Sun
  • If Apple does come out with a response, they have to sink down to Napster's level and it doesn't jibe with their type of advertising at all.
  • Whilst they give their wives too much liberty to gad abroad, and bountiful allowance, they are accessory to their own miseries; animae uxorum pessime olent, as Plautus jibes, they have deformed souls, and by their painting and colours procure odium mariti, their husband's hate, especially, — [6280] cum misere viscantur labra mariti. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • She also said taunts and jibes about her old, unnatural look had been upsetting. The Sun
  • He made a monkey gesture at the crowd as he left the field, a reference to the jibes that had been directed at him. Times, Sunday Times
  • Cheap jibes aside, do you consider yourself Scottish? Times, Sunday Times
  • Unlike many other politicians, he refuses to indulge in cheap jibes at other people's expense.
  • Unknotting privacy dilemmas from first principles can be tricky, or at least lead to results that don't jibe with most people's felt intuitions.
  • We took in topsail and staysail, dropped the main-peak, and as we got abreast of the principal wharf jibed the mainsail. Charley's "Coup"
  • But a caring family couldn't totally protect the young Alíesha from the jibes and taunts of schoolmates and soldiers.
  • She had done nothing to deserve Deana's petty jibes, and suddenly it was too much.
  • This hasn't faded: he jibed in his most recent interview that he always aims to "outfox the media. Johann Hari: Don't Be Fooled, Many Brits Will Cringe at the Royal Wedding Frenzy
  • How did your expectations jibe with the reality?
  • Now she has knocked the cruel jibes on the head as she bids to book a place at this summer's Olympics. The Sun
  • This does not jibe with my experience, nor that of most Americans, at least.
  • The ‘GE to GM’ phrase just doesn't jibe with most people's sense of their options.
  • And fans were still aiming the jibe at him when he boarded the team bus 40 minutes after the final whistle. The Sun
  • To those who've forgotten that the man who coined the term agnostic was also Darwin's self-appointed "bulldog," fiercely defending his work and discovery against the jibes of a derisive, behind-the-times Church of England, it's worth remembering that Huxley in turn criticized Spencer for not only making agnosticism require a static, permanent doubt, but also for failing to underline some of the worst social consequences of religion. Christopher Lane: Debates About Agnosticism Are As Old As The Concept Itself
  • It is not immediately clear how this jibes with the subsequent emphasis on working-class docility and immiseration of workers under the burden of capital's competitive restructuring efforts.
  • Zlatan pretty much defines the jibe 'hatstand' in every sense. The Guardian World News
  • When you pompously attach yourself, for self elevation purposes, as “the” back scratcher by putting others down, its clear its another of your feeble, (carcass related) insidious Jackal & Hide jibes, you all to often, are compelled to pathetically, and pathologically bring sick attention to yourself. A Prison of the Mind Two
  • In short, Mr. Burroughs's homocentric theory has been developed out of his homocentric ego, and by the misuse of language he strives to make the facts of life jibe with his theory. The Other Animals
  • ‘If corners had not been invented, we would have been in the game,’ he jibed.
  • We took in topsail and staysail, dropped the main peak, and as we got abreast of the principal wharf jibed the mainsail. Charley's Coup
  • An afternoon talking to the protesters, however, had filled her head with data that did not jibe with what she had been told.
  • Cheap jibes aside, do you consider yourself Scottish? Times, Sunday Times
  • You don't agree with them, you offer opinions that don't jibe with theirs and you get a target on your back.
  • It began with loud jibes and insults issued at both sides, and quickly developed into a shoving match.
  • His wife, Liz (Janet McTeer), taunts him with sexual jibes.
  • Perhaps, ironically, all those cheap jibes helped him here. Times, Sunday Times
  • The midfielder (right) says his side must ignore jibes about their massive financial losses and use their strengths. The Sun
  • Think before you jibe, the effects may not seem much to you, but the for the recipient, well it could just push them over the edge.
  • But the only ‘evidence’ for these upcoming disasters is the output of computer models that don't jibe with reality.
  • He made a monkey gesture at the crowd as he left the field, a reference to the jibes that had been directed at him. Times, Sunday Times
  • We didn't talk about the wedding, but threw light-hearted jibes at each other regarding our respective lives.
  • And the greedy, self-serving, fake Christians at Long's church ate up this false portrayal of Jesus Christ as the Lord of Luxury because it jibed with their solipsistic lifestyle. Wayne Besen: Bishop Bling and the Gay Fling: Rev. Eddie Long's Downfall
  • On the way down, Andy teaches us how to jibe, or turn away from the wind.
  • All the pessimism and darkness that come with a far-away war against a hard-to-find enemy just don't jibe with that mojo.
  • At the port, what started out as a backslapping exercise by the general shifted after a good-natured jibe from one of the enlisted soldiers.
  • His acting is so total that he totals every ordinary part; only his own one-man squibs and diatribes, envenomed caricatures, and scurrilous jibes can contain his rant.

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