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Kipling

[ US /ˈkɪpɫɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. English author of novels and poetry who was born in India (1865-1936)

How To Use Kipling In A Sentence

  • Hale and hearty, though aged, strong-featured, with the tough and leathery skin produced by long years of sunbeat and weatherbeat, his was the unmistakable sea face and eyes; and at once there came to me a bit of Kipling's A Winner of the Victoria Cross
  • The story is Kipling's brilliant refutation of the widely accepted saw that time heals all wounds.
  • Wodehouse is loved by Indians who loathe Kipling and detest the Raj and all its works.
  • Didn't Kipling make the point that if you keep paying the Danegeld you won't get rid of the Dane? Tony Blair: The Next Labour Prime Minister?
  • Kipling, Burroughs, H.G. Wells, Arthur Conan Doyle, and many lesser authors penned stories full of animal hides and bare feet, struggles for food and battles with ravening beasts.
  • Over the last century, writers like Rudyard Kipling and moviemakers like Walt Disney have given almost human qualities to what in real life are wild and untamable animals.
  • The title novella is about Ravi, "a wild creature from the mountains" in the vein of Kipling's Mowgli. Rapt in Translation; Zombie Zoology
  • Kipling's low opinion of English rugby has rarely seemed more apposite. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mr Kipling as journalist and very efficient colourman in words has made much of India in his time. Rudyard Kipling
  • In 1901 a brief review waxed lyrical over the novel Kim, calling it "a fine antidote to all manner of morbidness" and the finest of Kipling's creations to date, a book "that fairly amazes one by the proof it affords of the author's magnificent versatility. Who Was Kipling?
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