How To Use Jingle In A Sentence

  • No one builds a jingle or a slogan or even a brand identity using web advertising.
  • A dear little announcerette rattled off expert intros to various gymnastic jingles, one of which featured dogs barking in the background.
  • Coins jingled freely in his pocket as he strolled toward the man and his cart.
  • Its catchy jingle goes "Stop! Bad Food Britain
  • There is an occasional cough, the shuffle of a footstep, the jingle of some coins, and the rattle of newspapers.
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  • Dombey, exulting in the long – looked – for event, jingled and jingled the heavy gold watch – chain that depended from below his trim blue coat, whereof the buttons sparkled phosphorescently in the feeble rays of the distant fire. Dombey and Son
  • Lightly stuff the ball with fiberfill, adding the jingle bell or rattle to the center.
  • Only the "scroop" of the runners and jingle of the sleigh-bells seemed to be hammered into the brain, for all eternity. From Paris to New York by Land
  • The sound of horses stopping and the jingle of the reigns is all she hears.
  • Silence falls as he limps up the the bar - no sound anywhere in the saloon except for the jingle of his gunbelt. Making Light: Open thread 137
  • Laurie undergoes a series of trials, trying to find some backbone against his phobias, while singing TV jingles.
  • A mock radio jingle for the species of grouper formerly known as the "jewfish," containing the line: "Close your eyes and try to picture a great big friendly jewfish -- that is unless you're Jewish. Scrutinizing Hate Monger Glen Beck; "close-to-painful murdering of the dark people."
  • Michael, it turns out, works freelance, as a composer of radio jingles.
  • His index finger looped through a chain of car keys and he shook it with a jingle over his shoulder.
  • But that doesn't make such a catchy jingle, does it, Bob?
  • He was bribed by that scoundrel, Jingle, to put me on a wrong scent, by telling a cock-and-bull story of my sister and your friend Tupman!
  • This jingle is comedy gold, folks, especially the razzle-dazzle way the unknown little boy (possibly a girl) singer delivers it. The Children’s Half-Hour : Scrubbles.net
  • A barber has become so annoyed by mobile phone use in his shop that he has started issuing fines every time he hears a bleep or electronic jingle.
  • It reduces them to the level of a jingle, a word that describes the sound of change in your pocket, which is what your songs become.
  • Why, look ye," said the latter, as the coin jingled in his bag, "I was ever held in good repute as a guide, and can make my way blindfold over the bogs and mosses hereabout; and I would pilot thee to the place yonder, if my fealty to the prior -- that is -- if -- I mean -- though I was never a groat the richer for his bounty; yet he may not like strangers to pry into his garners and store-houses, especially in these evil times, when every cur begins to yelp at the heels of our bountiful mother; and every beast to bray out its reproaches at her great wealth and possessions. Traditions of Lancashire, Volume 1 (of 2)
  • Fluff plays a worldly, battered guitar, while Billy accompanies on his harmonica, making a tuneful jingle which feels special because of the supreme effort of the two hard-up men.
  • But I wasn't surprised that the insistent commercial jingles of her childhood remained embedded in her brain.
  • Coming back from lunch on 56th street I suddenly encountered a four-foot-tall animatronic snowman singing ‘Jingle Bells’ over and over.
  • The town was snow-covered, too, and the frozen river, and wherever one went, the air was full of the gay jingle-jangle of countless sleighbells, while the streets were thronged with a motley collection of equipages, from the luxuriously upholstered double sleigh with its swaying robes and floating plumes, down to the shapeless home-made "pung" with its ragged, unlined buffalo skin snugly tucked in about the shawled and veiled grandma, who smilingly awaited her good man while he purchased the week's supply of groceries. Half a Dozen Girls
  • The jingle of her anklets was matched by the jingle of her laughter.
  • We can sing the jingles of our favorite brands.
  • As mentioned below, it shows a modern Native child; it also shows traditions, such as a powwow and jingle dancing, balanced with modern ways (a cousin is a lawyer, the video of grandmother.) Jingle Dancer
  • Harvey Nash, older, filled with regrets (sort of), more charming and arousable than ever, just in from the Coast, where he's reinvented himself as Nash Harvey, jingle composer and chronic bachelor, has returned to the scene of his first romantic crime. (read a sample chapter) Archive 2007-07-01
  • The coins tickled the tips of his fingers very pleasantly as he let them fall, and jingled musically in the darkness. The Fortune of the Rougons
  • Croft became a script editor for Rediffusion, and was then a light entertainment producer for Tyne Tees, writing many jingles. The Guardian World News
  • It will have New Jersey traffic, weather, conversation, comedy, jingles, listener calls and the rest of what Gordon calls a full-service afternoon show. NYDN Rss
  • There is an occasional cough, the shuffle of a footstep, the jingle of some coins, and the rattle of newspapers.
  • Many is the time, as the weariness of my spirit witnesseth, that I have heard Sah-luma rehearse, -- but never in all my experience of his prolix multiloquence, hath he given utterance to such a senseless jingle-jangle of verse-jargon as to-night! Ardath
  • Indian Express lead today), got into the act, dancing to the jingle of money, as the neon signs of global hypermodernity gradually lit up the night skyline of Indian cities. Kafila
  • So there I was, very very early in the morning, with just this bit of pretty polly in my left carman, jingle-jangling it and wondering: Where's the show?
  • The bleared eye rolled with a sort of self-congratulation, and the coins jingled more loudly. The Unclassed
  • The coins jingled in his pocket.
  • Into his head had come a new mantra, a jingle from a commercial on TV when he was growing up, a child of baseball fields and macadam basketball courts with their bent and rusted hoops and the intense otherworldly green of a New York summer, a green so multivalent and assertive it was like a promise of life to come. The Silence
  • Urania is represented by the armillary sphere, Euterpe by flutes, Thalia by the rebec, Melpomene by the hunting horn, Terpsichore by the cittern, Erato by the jingle ring, and Polyhymnia by the organ. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • Janet immediately shot up when she heard the jingle of keys just outside the entrance.
  • All this happened at a time when other High Street retailers have been listening to the satisfying jingles of ringing cash registers.
  • It's a bold concept, but one that's smartly conveyed by its paintings and hypnotic jingle.
  • When you hear a catchy jingle, your destiny partner is close. The Sun
  • Now when you have some lamebrain campaign where there's someone attempting to rap or do a jingle that mimics a style of rap, it comes off corny because it's obvious that someone didn't do their homework.
  • His newscasts are announced by a familiar jingle, and the newsroom is a white antiseptic box.
  • He went on to a varied career which included writing jingles and having some success acting.
  • The chimes jingled in the breeze.
  • The jingles on the King of France, against the Scots in the time of James I., against the Tory, or Irish rapparee, and about the Gunpowder Plot, are of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The Nursery Rhyme Book
  • The old Toffifay candy commercial jingle is something that really offended me as a kid. All Singing, All Snacking : Scrubbles.net
  • Brian put his hands in his pockets and jingled some change.
  • She pushed past him and the bell gave a light jingle once more.
  • Spasms of alto sax meet the outer edge of the record, accompanied by the jingle of a music box and the rattle of metal shards dropping to the floor.
  • After a moment, I heard his footsteps fade into a jingle of keys and a hacking cough.
  • Today we'll sing a song , Jingle Bells.
  • Dud was talking to the jingler who had just come off duty. The Fighting Edge
  • Its catchy jingle goes "Stop! Bad Food Britain
  • The airwaves may be awash with treacly DJs, nerve-shredding jingles and the kind of yammering advertisements that deserve their very own circle in Hell, but no one thinks radio is an affront to Western civilisation as a result. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • So remote is this little place from the stir and bustle of travel, and so destitute of the show and vainglory of this world, that my calesa, as it rattled and jingled along the narrow and ill-paved streets, caused a great sensation; the children shouted and scampered along by its side, admiring its splendid trappings of brass and worsted, and gazing with reverence at the important stranger who came in so gorgeous an equipage. The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus (Volume II)
  • A follow-up commercial had a gray-bunned schoolmarm firing off a letter about the grammatical goof, only to be challenged with the jingle, ‘Whaddaya want, good grammar or good taste?’
  • After the last showing at the cinemas, when the back roads were quiet, Bill retraced our route along Jingle Pot Road.
  • Initially a radio jingle, it was requested so often by listeners on its release in 1971 that the company decided to film a video. Times, Sunday Times
  • Horse-drawn sleighs jingle by, carrying passengers on the occasional Sunday outing.
  • The Flake has a history of sensual advertising, dating back to 1959, with the continuing jingle line, "Only the crumbliest, flakiest chocolate, tastes like chocolate never tasted before. The Inspiration Room? | Daily
  • Lightly stuff the ball with fiberfill, adding the jingle bell or rattle to the center.
  • Jingle bells jingle bells jingle all the way.
  • Most often this group is targeted with a single approach, a somewhat corny or hokey jingle and stock message.
  • The city itself is a spectacle to behold, with dazzling lights, beeps and whistles, and the sound of change going ‘jingle jangle’ all night long.
  • Then chanteuse Susan Marder, the show's science jingle writer, belted out an ode to the joys of consuming test-tube generated faux meat: "Give it to the kids at every seating/myoblast is what you're eating! Pasadena Star-News Most Viewed
  • I could hear a jingle of keys and the bar doors opening.
  • Humming the Michelob jingle, Macklin strode to the rear of the car, squatted, and pulled a folded sticker from his back pocket. Archive 2010-04-01
  • Then he realized it was the jingle of harness as Hoss and Joe pulled back into the yard.
  • He placed it on the floor, opened up a package containing assorted jingle balls, rolled one across the floor, and grinned as the little ball of energy went pelting after in hot pursuit.
  • A long sword jingled beside him on the stone floor and clashed with his spurred boots. Come Rack! Come Rope!
  • Drake took a tight grip of the man's shoulders, but couldn't stop him from falling onto his side and rolling over onto his back with a metal jingle.
  • The result is admittedly shambolic at times but leaves the distinct feeling that, rather than listening to a jingle-laden radio show, you've popped round to a friend's house to listen to records that they like and think you might like.
  • Marjorie was busy and jumpy, a jingler of change and a tapper of toes, which made it pretty rich that she called Uncle Glen hyper. VQR
  • The jingle of keys rings out as the guard makes his rounds.
  • All were blindfolded with the exception of one, who was the jingler, and who carried a bell in each hand, which he was obliged to keep ringing. Old English Sports
  • the jingle of coins
  • The Lepton, taking this new vocalization for communication, turned on its pre-recorded dolphin speech and approached closer than Jingles thought prudent. A Simple Misunderstanding
  • One thing is for sure; it has nothing whatever to do with the mealy mouthed jingle from the Home Office called the Policing Pledge. The Italian Job « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • As an interesting sidebar to this story, if you're American you may wonder why pennies don't jingle in your pocket these days the way they used to.
  • It was an amusing sight to see the men trying to catch the active jingler, running into each other's arms, and catching every one but the right one. Old English Sports
  • He opened the glass door to leave, which resulted in a familiar jingle, breaking the persistent silence.
  • “If you sh-sh-shake them, mister, ” repeated Spörri and both of them swung their trousers about till the coins jingled in the pockets. Paras. 100–199
  • When you hear a catchy jingle, your destiny partner is close. The Sun
  • I'll bet you added some geegaw or widget to it the first time you had a little jingle in your pockets.
  • They jingled loudly as she raised them, proceeding to unlock the cell.
  • If you remember this radio jingle, well, you're cool.
  • Her ankle bracelets jingle as she paces the Persian carpet.
  • Every so often there was a comforting buzz and jingle in my ski jacket pocket as the messages came through on chairlifts, on the top of mountains, and in mountain top cafes.
  • LAST CHANCE HARVEY, PG-13 Something clicks when a down-andout jingle writer meets a prickly British statistician in a London airport bar. Arkansas Democrat-Gazette stories
  • The soft tinkles and jingles are heard with every step.
  • Instead of having any quiet after the retreat of the ladies, the house was kept in a rattle, and the glasses jingled on the table as the flymen and coachmen plied the knocker, and the soiree came in. A Little Dinner at Timmins’s
  • Suddenly he heard the slight jingle of keys in the hallway, followed by footsteps.
  • Richard, never at any time a glib jingler of rhymes, was in sorry case, for now that he had most need of his wits, his passion instead of sharpening them seemed to have removed them utterly. Romance of Roman Villas (The Renaissance)
  • The cock was always conspicuous on any walk one took into the fens, with black cap and bib and white collar, flying up on to a sallow bush, uttering a wheezy jingle of alarm notes.
  • You can read about the escapade, with annoying advertising jingle here.
  • A dog collar jingled as Maggie launched herself into bed, snooted, and circled. Dark Oracle
  • The whole Conan/Terminator amalgamation is stupid enough, but hell, they might as well have added in Arnold's characters from Predator, Commando, Twins and Jingle All the Way while they were at it. Archive 2009-06-01
  • As the bell on the door jingled, Muller looked up from the counter.
  • With the kids jingle belling and everyone telling you, I'm Gonna Do It This Year!
  • They drive SUVs and talk in advertising jingles.
  • The explosives jingled loudly in the night air and the soldier turned in surprise.
  • A faint breeze wafted a salty tang off the sea, jingled the rigging on the rows of yachts.
  • Her looped earrings jingled lightly as she shook her head every so often.
  • Every one knew that a tocsin bell to be duly rung, should be rung long and loud — not with a little merry jingle, such as befitted the announcement of a wedding, but in a manner to strike astonishment, if not alarm, into its hearers; and on this occasion great justice was done to the tocsin. La Vend�e
  • The metal coins jingled happily as I positioned myself in the second row. My Resolution
  • After thousands of ad jingles, her voice became known enough to get chances of TV serials.
  • Luckily, the peddlers of this dangerous message haven't come up with a catchy jingle.
  • There are times when sound cues are used (a jingle of wind chimes, the burble of water), and the aural presentation here emphasizes them nicely.
  • The group of sleigh bells hung above the door jingled merrily as Wendy and Samantha entered the general store.
  • So he ate and drank and made merry and took his pleasure and gave gifts of gear and coin and was profuse with gold and addrest himself up to eating fowls and breaking the seals of wine-flasks and listening to the giggle of the daughter of the vine, as she gurgled from the flagon and enjoying the jingle of the singing-girls; nor did he give over this way of life, till his wealth was wasted and the case worsened and all his goods went from him and he bit his hands284 in bitter penitence. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Norton is covering for Chris Evans on his Breakfast Show for two weeks and has been blessed with something most stand-ins can only dream of: his own jingle, full of pizzazz and, crucially, his name boldly proclaimed. Breakfast Show
  • The large one is the gong bell, the other is the speed bell, and the latter is a jingler. Taken by the Enemy
  • The melodies have the nagging, insistent quality of advertising jingles, impossible to get out of your head once they're in.
  • There is an occasional cough, the shuffle of a footstep, the jingle of some coins, and the rattle of newspapers.
  • It remains to be seen whether electro-tango is a blip or a school of thought, though, and fans, beginning to get weary of hearing their favourite riffs sampled in jingles and TV commercials, are eagerly awaiting a follow up.
  • When you hear a catchy jingle, your destiny partner is close. The Sun
  • The vast orchestra includes almost everything that tinkles, jingles or bangs, even bells, a vibraphone and a windmachine, as well as women's voices without words.
  • However, he soon returned to it, and started doing odd music assignments, such as singing remixes and cover versions, besides ad jingles.
  • Choose pretty necklaces with little charms or a sweet bangle which will jingle. The Sun
  • In spite of the protest of the citizens of the great metropolis, "cabby," with his smart livery, his soft, suave and polite "want-a-cab?" was to be forever hushed by the ear-piercing jingle of the car bells and the coarse yells of the driver. " Eagle Clippings " by Jack Thorne, Newspaper Correspondent and Story Teller, A Collection of His Writings to Various Newspapers
  • Until two months ago the familiar jingle that whips most children into a frenzy went unheard by the toddler who was born profoundly deaf.
  • I ended up with about a dozen and a half beignets, which I sprinkled with powdered sugar using my grandmother's spring-loaded flour sifter while singing Jingle Bells, and then fed them to my neighbors.
  • Abruptly, Adrian heard the sound of a jingle coming from outside his apartment door.
  • Other research suggests that by learning rhymes, poems, and jingles children develop awareness of sounds in words.
  • She found her keys, their familiar jingle rattling her.
  • Honourable Members start to their feet; stray bullets singing epicedium even here, shivering in with window-glass and jingle. The French Revolution
  • chantey" is given, copied from an old scrapbook, and while it can hardly be recommended as a delectable piece of literature, in any sense, it is interesting, aside from its Stevensonian connection, as a bit of rough, unstudied sailor's jingle, the very authorship of which is long since forgotten. The Dead Men's Song Being the Story of a Poem and a Reminiscent Sketch of its Author Young Ewing Allison
  • They mix and match a wide range of disparate foreign elements to create a melting pot of human and mechanical voices, jingles, sounds and samples.
  • Special thanks to Kosta Andreadis for our awesome title jingle! IGN Complete
  • Coins jingled into the dust followed by jewelry, daggers, and knives.
  • The key fell on the ground with a jingle.
  • I love it in all it's novelty plastic Santa, reindeers pooping chocolate covered raisins, cuddly robins singing ‘Jingle Bells’, hot toddy flavoured bubble bath glory.
  • Athena's jingle mentioned the product name thrice, and was much "zippier" than theirs. BuddyTV
  • I want a link for the Mr. Machine TV commercial jingle.
  • And Dick jingled away into the house still chanting his extemporized directory. CHAPTER XVI
  • The key fell on the ground with a jingle.
  • His half-cocked smile and his standpat spurs really jingle my jangle. The DC Damsel: The Top Five Reasons I'd Boff Dick Cheney
  • Choose pretty necklaces with little charms or a sweet bangle which will jingle. The Sun
  • Urania is represented by the armillary sphere, Euterpe by flutes, Thalia by the rebec, Melpomene by the hunting horn, Terpsichore by the cittern, Erato by the jingle ring, and Polyhymnia by the organ. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • Return thither on some clear, dark, moonless night, with a ring of frost in the air, and only a star or two set sparsedly in the vault of heaven; and you will find a sight as stimulating as the hoariest summit of the Alps. The solitude seems perfect; the patient astronomer, flat on his back under the Observatory dome and spying heaven's secrets, is your only neighbour; and yet from all round you there come up the dull hum of the city, the tramp of countless people marching out of time, the rattle of carriages and the continuous keen jingle of the tramway bells. Edinburgh Picturesque Notes
  • Further along is Jingle Pot, another large crater of no great depth.
  • New York City is preparing for a drastic new approach to noise such as as giving barking dogs five minutes to cease yapping at night and obliging ice cream vans to replace their musical jingles with bells.
  • She flexed her left wrist at Cath, and more bracelets jingled against her black athletic watch.
  • It is the maxim which amid crashes and boings, jaunty jingles and fusillades of machine gun bullets has powered two philosophy graduates from the University of York to a fortune.
  • While he had stints writing advertising jingles in India, composing for films has been his life's work so far, yet from his studio in Chennai he admitted to CNN he didn't want to score films.
  • Initially a radio jingle, it was requested so often by listeners on its release in 1971 that the company decided to film a video. Times, Sunday Times
  • She shook her purse in her hand until the coins jingled, as if she alluded merely to this example of her forgetfulness. Night and Day, by Virginia Woolf
  • We sing jingles, eat media recommended food and rely on the media to communicate with our dear ones.
  • It was while at the Jingle-bob, but mailed by a cattleman from Chicago, that Young Dick wrote a letter to his guardians. CHAPTER V
  • Spasms of alto sax meet the outer edge of the record, accompanied by the jingle of a music box and the rattle of metal shards dropping to the floor.
  • Her purse jingled as she rummaged through it before removing a single handkerchief, rosy pink with white speckles, and dabbing her tweaked brow.
  • Gold jewelry jingled softly around her neck and wrists.
  • The language she uses is beautiful, and she has a way of phrasing things that can make me smell the damp, chill air and the woodsmoke, hear the stamp of a horse's foot, and the jingle of mail.
  • Finally, Mrs. Carrillo cleared things up for me, and this is what a bob-tail is in the Jingle Bells song: A bobtail is a shorted tail of a horse, dog or sheep. Christmas spirit
  • He was not at all jockeyish to look at, though; he had a round black head and a well-trimmed black beard, bright eyes like a bird’s; he jingled money in his pockets; he jangled a great gold watch chain; and he never turned up except dressed just too much like a gentleman to be one. The Complete Father Brown
  • Jingle bell. Bad me smell. I just crap my pant.
  • The music is all europop jingles, sparse drum sounds and nursery rhythms. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'I gave not quite a rix dollar for the jingler;' and threw me back that he had gone to cheat me of; honest for once, and over late; and so, with many sighs, bade me Godspeed. The Cloister and the Hearth
  • Instantly dazzled, I scurry along to the top of a bed at the very end, by the corner, where a petrol lamp jingles unnoticed from a ceiling grapnel.
  • Initially a radio jingle, it was requested so often by listeners on its release in 1971 that the company decided to film a video. Times, Sunday Times
  • Brian put his hands in his pockets and jingled some change.
  • It made me realise why advertising tunelets are called ‘jingles,’ because it is jingling like a cluster of unmelodious bells in my brain.
  • Its catchy jingle goes "Stop! Bad Food Britain
  • Leaning back slightly, he felt the porcelain gun on the inside of his coat, rubbing against his side, and the light jingle of a jar of pills.
  • Hums and clicks from the forensic instruments filled the parlor, coins jingled in somebody’s pocket. The Burning Wire
  • Ronnie, the bass player, has made a fortune writing advertising jingles.
  • This most proves my point: while I knew previously that Gilligan's Island was based on a pretty common rhythm for English, there are even some interlingual rhythms, which I learned when learning the party trick of singing medieval Spanish poetry (versos alejandrinos) to the tune of Jingle Bells. CHE > Latest news
  • The sleigh bells jingle as we ride.
  • At the sound of the horses' hooves and the jingle of tack, she turned toward the road and watched as the men rode by. A Time of War
  • In the commercial, nine-year-old boys are clustered around the oven, making faces and bobbing their heads along to the jingle.
  • Some jingles have entered the folklore of the nation.
  • That he went from wreck to wreck with this bland, nameless jingle on his lips was nothing short of demoniacal. EVERVILLE
  • When James graduated he played jingles for adverts; Lee lived for his music. THE KINDEST USE A KNIFE
  • When you hear a catchy jingle, your destiny partner is close. The Sun
  • A jingle is a square box of painted canvas with no back to it, because, as was luminously explained to me, you must have some way to get into it, and I had to sit sideways in it, with my portmanteau bucking like a three-year-old on the seat opposite to me. All on the Irish Shore Irish Sketches
  • Urania is represented by the armillary sphere, Euterpe by flutes, Thalia by the rebec, Melpomene by the hunting horn, Terpsichore by the cittern, Erato by the jingle ring, and Polyhymnia by the organ. Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • The rhythmic beating of hooves, and jingle of the harness fell into sync with the serenade of the forest.
  • From his left the sound of hooves and a jingle of horse harness announced the approach of a group of riders. Man of Honour
  • McPherson pulled a large bundle of keys out of his overstuffed pocket, causing them to chink and jingle noisily.
  • Initially a radio jingle, it was requested so often by listeners on its release in 1971 that the company decided to film a video. Times, Sunday Times
  • And then, about ten days after I had started galloping her, a couple of Ruski staff captains jingled into the courtyard one morning, to be followed by a large horse-sled, and shortly afterwards comes the Count's major-domo to East and me, presenting his apologies, and chivvying us off to our rooms. The Sky Writer
  • There is scarce a plough jogger or country cobler that has read our Psalms and can make two lines jingle, who has not once in his life at least exercised his talent in this way. Customs and Fashions in Old New England
  • We walked outside, chased by the echo of jingle bells, church bells tolling ten.
  • A faint breeze wafted a salty tang off the sea, jingled the rigging on the rows of yachts.
  • Going at full speed, the jingler brings the engine down to half speed, or at half speed carries it up to full speed. On The Blockade
  • Scropps never could, under the most improved system of campanology, be jingled into any thing harmonious, I have no doubt I, like my great predecessor Whittington, might have heard in that peal a prediction of my future exaltation; certain it is I did not; and, wearied with my journey, I took up my lodging for the night at a very humble house near The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 14, No. 380, July 11, 1829
  • From his left the sound of hooves and a jingle of horse harness announced the approach of a group of riders. Man of Honour
  • Santa was accompanied by ‘Mother Christmas’, a Fairy Queen, a little Dutch Girl and eight bandsmen in blue, who delighted the children by playing such items as ‘Jingle Bells’.
  • Microsoft Bing jingler sticks it to Techcrunch’s MG Siegler | Webbyn. com Bing Has Succeeded… In Finding The Worst Jingle Ever
  • At the sound of the horses' hooves and the jingle of tack, she turned toward the road and watched as the men rode by. A Time of War
  • He sat back in the driver's seat and played with the keys, which jingled lightly.
  • There came a teasing jingle sound and the youth smiled eagerly.
  • The door jingled merrily as Maria pushed it open.
  • From "The irresistible, singable, stick-in-your-mindable jingle is dead" (Boston Globe): Winter scenes
  • The cops in the future can't handle the job because "San Angeles" in the 21st century is a peaceful, crimeless, utterly sterile place -- a fascist Eden of unending banality where cocktail pianists sing old commercial jingles, fines are given for profanity, where sex and cholesterol are illegal and all restaurants are called Taco Bell. Altered States And Demoman
  • A fat Father Christmas was standing beside Eros singing `Jingle Bells '. CHAMELEON
  • Halt!" said Gethin, bringing his fist down so heavily on the table that the tea-things jingled, "not a word against the old man -- the best father that ever walked, and I was the worst boy on Garthowen slopes, driving the chickens into the water, shooing the geese over the hedges, riding the horses full pelt down the stony roads, setting fire to the gorse bushes, mitching from school, and making the boys laugh in chapel; no wonder the old man turned me away. Garthowen A Story of a Welsh Homestead

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