Laurel

[ UK /lˈɔːɹə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɔɹəɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States slapstick comedian (born in England) who played the scatterbrained and often tearful member of the Laurel and Hardy duo who made many films (1890-1965)
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How To Use Laurel In A Sentence

  • Commander Laurel D' ken smiled wryly as the blue haired officer said to Allison, ‘We'll need to nursemaid them a bit but I think they'd be able to manage well enough.’
  • Something about paper walls, I think, about archery, and a good deal about evergreen laurel, myrtle and wild camellia.
  • That said, the advisability of perching a laurel crown on a horse-riding hat, which tended to happen after the equestrianism events, may have to be addressed.
  • We bumbled around each other like Laurel and Hardy in the gloom, fumbling for a torch we couldn't find.
  • Q WHY are the new leaves on my laurel curly and white? The Sun
  • My cherry laurel is getting too tall. Times, Sunday Times
  • I guess I got all bigheaded (or rested on my laurels, or something). I’m seeing a trend | clusterflock
  • `A Pomeranian ," replied this morning's guest, a big, blowsy matron straight out of Laurel and Hardy. SURE OF YOU
  • What the notes don't tell you is that the flexible sprays of bay leaves can still be shaped into a passable laurel crown. Christianity Today
  • An important feature of the site is the lack of invasive non-native exotics like rhododendron and laurel.
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