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How To Use Lubber In A Sentence

  • They are very much secluded from the rest of Chiloe, and have scarcely any sort of commerce, except sometimes in a little oil, which they get from seal-blubber. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • Trey listened with a patient ear, only making distance with the receiver when she whined or couldn't make out her blubbering.
  • They are knee-deep in gelid gray water, with food and clothing, skinned seagulls and whale blubber, sheepskins and oilskins - the ancient flotsam of death at sea - sloshing about them.
  • Clubbers bopped on the open air, split-level dance floor until the early hours of the morning.
  • The baby whale develops a thick layer of blubber to protect it from the cold sea.
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  • Friars Cowle, which was so snottie and greazie, that good store of kitchin stuffe might have beene boiled out of it; as also a foule slovenly Trusse or halfe doublet, all baudied with bowsing, fat greazie lubberly sweating, and other drudgeries in the Convent The Decameron
  • Maybe then I'll lose some of my blubber, 'cause really you didn't have much to lose, sweet cheeks.
  • No, not fat as in gross blubber bouncing around my waist and stuff; it's just that I think I'm about a few pounds heavier than I was when I was really fit in first year.
  • Or they asserted that all those landlubberly creatures had walked dry-shod across a natural bridge or had swum short distances between stepping-stones, and that one such formation or another had since disappeared beneath the waves. Galapagos
  • The UK has become a vast blubber mountain. The Sun
  • When we tried to microwave some frozen whale blubber sent down from Barrow, we ended up laughing as the muktuk sizzled and got tough. Ellen Frankenstein: From Tofu to Muktuk
  • blubber cheeks
  • Still, the result is an entertaining overview that can be recommended both to surfers and to landlubbers who appreciate the spectacle and have a fondness for the associated strand of American youth culture.
  • Fish oil supplements are derived from a variety of sources, including mackerel, herring, tuna, salmon, cod liver, halibut, whale blubber and seal blubber.
  • The sail was clewed up, and in a few seconds I was clinging to the sliding gunter royal mast, and gathering in the canvas, while the captain was denouncing me for a lubber, for not accomplishing impossibilities. Jack in the Forecastle or, Incidents in the Early Life of Hawser Martingale
  • A wind dead aft, blanketing more than half the canvas, is called a lubber's wind. All Afloat A Chronicle of Craft and Waterways
  • Other cases are shots of birds wheeling overhead, or dog teams riding, or kayak trips, or cleaning blubber that are all too long.
  • Mr Rudd wept as he said he was proud of his achievements - but not of 'blubbering'. Home | Mail Online
  • I don't propose to have "-- _shake_ --" an old windbag offering _me_ his blubbery old bosom "-- _shake, shake, SHAKE_ --" at this time of my life! Slippy McGee, Sometimes Known as the Butterfly Man
  • The baby whale develops a thick layer of blubber to protect it from the cold sea.
  • Great lubberly fellow like you, 'busin' that poor babby all the time! The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 82, August, 1864
  • Lit'rally speaking, I am the ship you lubbers are standin’ on now.
  • That's right, puts the yarn on slubber on what we called a Oral History Interview with Lacy Wright, March 10, 1975. Interview E-0017. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • I sobbed and wept so that my eyes were almost blind; and the ruffian you have such sympathy with stood opposite: presuming every now and then to bid me "wisht," and denying that it was his fault; and, finally, frightened by my assertions that I would tell papa, and that he should be put in prison and hanged, he commenced blubbering himself, and hurried out to hide his cowardly agitation. Wuthering Heights
  • Meanwhile, in the largest ever survey of drug use among British clubbers, published in this month's edition of Mixmag, there were found to be large year-on-year falls in the number of people taking cannabis (by five percentage points), ketamine (10), ecstasy (five) and cocaine (20). How the British fell out of love with drugs
  • When I looked at his face I saw his blubber lips twitching with the efforts of attempted smile, but he couldn't quite carry it off.
  • He was not a lumberjack, or a fur trader, and he didn't live in an igloo or eat blubber, or own a dog sled.
  • At this point I am taking a coffee break as I retch once again at the thought of whale blubber sitting unhappily in my oesophagus.
  • ‘Stop being such a lubber about it,’ Tobias sighed but said nothing as Kennedy and the gunner, Gallagher entered the room.
  • She was crying and blubbering, unable to believe what I was doing.
  • Clubbers are in for a treat as a new nightclub is set to open its doors to the public.
  • The ventral surface of the pouch is covered by grooved blubber, on which the 50-90 grooves extend from the jaw tips to as far posteriorly as the umbilicus. Archive 2006-10-01
  • Yes I am losing my blubber, but I have tonnes of it left to lose.
  • As we ease in for the pick-up, I can see a tiny nub of blubber protruding from the end of the tip.
  • Inside it's split over three levels and more hectic, with weekend clubbers cramming in to bop and bounce to everything from house to hip-hop.
  • The drug was not dying, I concluded, but clubbers might be turning to cocaine instead. How the British fell out of love with drugs
  • It could make overly cautious surfers happy but we land-lubbers better start coming up with some ways to stick our finger in the dike. Don Ringe: The $100 Trillion Tsunami
  • While that's certainly true of the Target Lady, Kristen did bite at my suggestion of a film chronicling the glamorous backstory of stage star-turned-game show flubber Mindy Grayson: "A Mindy Grayson movie," she says. Keck's Exclusives: A Kristen Wiig Variety Show?
  • This is largely because dance mix albums have come to be seen as yet another means for DJs to squeeze cash out of hapless clubbers.
  • Then he creates a hyperkinetic rubber called flubber and suddenly he's thwarting villains, winning basketball games and saving his rinky-dinky college, as well as his love life. Film Clips
  • Potato chips aren't rubbery and blubbery like fat. They are crispy and crunchy like lettuce. That proves they are diet food.
  • They are knee-deep in gelid gray water, with food and clothing, skinned seagulls and whale blubber, sheepskins and oilskins - the ancient flotsam of death at sea - sloshing about them.
  • Friars Cowle, which was so snottie and greazie, that good store of kitchin stuffe might have beene boiled out of it; as also a foule slovenly Trusse or halfe doublet, all baudied with bowsing, fat greazie lubberly sweating, and other drudgeries in the Convent The Decameron
  • Here he found remains of structures for rendering blubber into whale oil.
  • Even so, they might have managed to scrape through the winter on their stock of frozen salmon and stored blubber, and what the traps gave them, but in December one of their hunters came across a tupik (a skin-tent) of three women and a girl nearly dead, whose men had come down from the far North and been crushed in their little skin hunting-boats while they were out after the long-horned narwhal. The Second Jungle Book
  • Then into the hollow goes the whalebone, so, tightly coiled, and another piece of blubber is fitted over the whale-bone. The Story of Keesh
  • June 23rd, 2006 at 7: 37 pm moonbat patrol says: nice try again clubber but the personal attacks which are your standard MO don’t really cut it. Think Progress » Fox Gets ‘Fair And Balanced’ Access to Guantanamo
  • Those huge, rubbery, blubbery, slobbering slabs of meat; oh, it was just gross!
  • Romalea microptera–eastern lubber grasshopper chewing on leaf of pond apple, Annona glabra, Loxahatchee, Florida. The Panda's Thumb: September 2009 Archives
  • An issue about human mountains of wobbling blubber in danger of making their country sink under their weight. The Sun
  • Charcoal, Propane, Mesquite, whale blubber, whatever gives you the taste that you desire.
  • to earn the name flubber for the rest of middle school and all of high school, that's right The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Prior to kerosene lamps, most lamps consisted of whale blubber.
  • An issue about human mountains of wobbling blubber in danger of making their country sink under their weight. The Sun
  • And when the short day left them, and the man lay down in the snow and blubbered, it was the woman who lashed him to the sled, bit her lips with the pain of her aching limbs, and helped the dog haul him to Malemute Kid's cabin. THE PRIESTLY PREROGATIVE
  • The first, or "slubber," gives it a very slight twist, just enough to suggest what is coming later, and of course in doing this makes it smaller. Makers of Many Things
  • It was that accursed black Obama that razeed me; made a poor begging lubber of me for ever and a day! ... Top Hillary Supporter Says She's Showing "Desperation"
  • ( "That stuff was like flubber," Mr. Lester said.) Take Me In to the Ballgame
  • As with sailors and landlubbers, a lot of people can't understand why we can't be satisfied with staying safely on the ground.
  • His letters to Mr. Astor, wherein he pours forth the bitterness of his soul, and his seamanlike impatience of what he considers the "lubberly" character and conduct of those around him, are before us, and are amusingly characteristic. Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprise Beyond the Rocky Mountains
  • These mostly 20-somethings are a million miles away from gilded superclubbers and heroin chic.
  • Yet no one seems to like a blubber. The Sun
  • The City and Westminster used to groan under the weight of excess blubber. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet no one seems to like a blubber. The Sun
  • Mr Mirfin, who earlier this week criticised the council over the matter, said the safety of clubbers visiting the Casbah was of prime importance.
  • I looked in the mirror at my blubber and blubbed. The Sun
  • The idea is designed to ensure clubbers can get home safely by using a licensed minicab rather than being picked up by drivers touting for business.
  • Othello, the fortitude of the place is best known to you; and though we have there a substitute of most allowed sufficiency, yet opinion, a sovereign mistress of effects, throws a more safer voice on you: you must therefore be content to slubber the gloss of your new fortunes with this more stubborn and boisterous expedition. Othello, the Moore of Venice
  • A gull will land on the back of a surfaced whale and rip at its flesh and blubber.
  • All you do is sob uncontrollably in the fetal position while blubbering, ‘I miss my Nana!’
  • A nice piece of blubber from a walrus or some reindeer tallow," said Menie. The Eskimo Twins
  • East gave a little ghost of a smile, and his hand tightened, and then went loose in mine - and I found I was blubbering and gasping, and thinking about Rugby, and hot murphies at Sally's shop, and a small fag limping along pathetically after the players at Big Side - because he couldn't play himself, you see, being lame. Fiancée
  • What inspired this low-maintenance lubberland? The Times Literary Supplement
  • They chewed at it until, softened, it yielded, like blubber or leather, to their understanding.
  • It would be difficult to image many of the young clubbers there settling into two nights of the Eurovision.
  • [81] Shakespeare uses the verb "slubber" in the sense of "perform in a slovenly manner" (_Merchant of Venice_, ii. The Works of Christopher Marlowe, Vol. 3 (of 3)
  • Cassidy placed a firm kiss on his cheeks and ushered herself out of the door before the tears could break through the mental dam and she began blubbering again.
  • And finally, there do be help available for ye landlubbers and scurvy dogs who can't talk like Pirates.
  • I saw French clubbers, men and women, in tears as the lights came up. Fallin’ Up
  • Yet the movement of his blubber lips, closely pressed together, showed clearly that he could not understand a word.
  • Wild boar, squid in black ink, raw seal liver, air-dried whale blubber, zebra. Lea Lane: The Weirdest Foods I Ever Ate
  • Motion, Avon Street, SatJohn MitchellThey may not be breaking much new ground musically – their mix of deep, tech and progressive house sounds would be familiar to a clubber who hasn't been out for over a decade – but Liverpool's Freeze still keep things fresh and interesting. This week's new clubs
  • After a about another half an hour of crying, blubbering, and her trying to tell me how she felt, she finally fell asleep and I softly moved her head to her pillow.
  • Occasionally she sighs deeply, with that blubbery, spluttery noise that all horses make when they sigh. Letters to Helen Impressions of an Artist on the Western Front
  • The same folks blubbering about the reigning obsession with thinness as an insult to fatness are making a disgusting mockery of starving people's plight.
  • Finally, blubbering and whining, the papa bear - triumph of American technology - just gave up.
  • Police are appealing for Blackburn clubbers to come forward after a serious assault near a town centre night club.
  • Paulus Jovius in his description of Britain, and Levinus Lemnius, observe as much of this our island, that there was of old no use of [4083] physic amongst us, and but little at this day, except it be for a few nice idle citizens, surfeiting courtiers, and stall-fed gentlemen lubbers. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Yet no one seems to like a blubber. The Sun
  • Then, limping over to Barn's prone body, he straddled the man, and sat down on his blubbery belly. GALILEE
  • Indeed, if it came to tonnage, I believe a good blubbery right-whale could easily give points to any deinosaur that ever moved upon oolitic continents. Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
  • Turn the map until the North point on the compass card points East or West of the lubber line.
  • It is iaid, thai fiich Blubbers - came from Ireland to live on his bouoty, that b« was obliged, for obvioos reafons, to make a law, that no ilraoser Cbonld cootinae on a vifit boger than a year tad a day, snlefshecoaldgiTeaitifficiefitrealbn for tc« The Works of the Caledonian Bards: Translated from the Galic
  • I'll not have you poison this vessel with your foolery and slubbering.
  • Mr. Todd, would visit the bark and offer interfering suggestions, after the manner of captains, which only embarrassed the officers; and Mr. Todd would take advantage of these occasions to make landlubberly comments and show a sad ignorance of things nautical. "Where Angels Fear to Tread" and Other Stories of the Sea
  • They say clubbers are being put off by costly door entry, expensive drinks and the venues being crowded. The Sun
  • His blubbering died to a sniffle, which he trimmed with his sleeve.
  • What he must have said was binnacle, the receptacle for the compass, and your landlubberly reporter misheard. Times, Sunday Times
  • We wander, awestruck, amid these languid mountains of blubber. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ada was blubbering now, tears and snot running down a red face, she opened her mouth to say one more thing, but at the last moment found some resolve.
  • And every town on the route seemed to produce at least one blubbery streaker, sliding along the ice on his bum, to relieve the waits between passing groups of skaters.
  • And then there's the pub, all brown and homely inside, but with seats outside where you can watch the activity on the water as the boats dislodge their holidaymaker crews in search of a pie and a pint, and people who look like habitual landlubbers establish their credentials by shouting commands which incorporate such seafarer words as "ahoy". The rail to nowhere
  • He was to investigate the pathology, the pesticide levels in the blubber, try to do bacteriology and virology.
  • Lies on a reinforced bed all day, a vast mountain of blubber. The Sun
  • A hard mod will help if you're installing a lighting kit, doubling the RAM (which no one really does anymore), adding an integrated IR sensor and most importantly, will let you remove the "flubber" animation from startup. XBMC 9.04 “Babylon” Updates For All Supported Platforms | Lifehacker Australia
  • “Gam,” a thing so utterly unknown to all other ships that they never heard of the name even; and if by chance they should hear of it, they only grin at it, and repeat gamesome stuff about “spouters” and “blubber-boilers,” and such like pretty exclamations. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • 'Volcano;' and, in order to give to his ship a still greater resemblance than it already had to a merchantman, he displayed an old faded scarlet ensign, and drew up his fore and main sail in what sailors term a lubberly manner. The Naval History of the United States Volume 2 (of 2)
  • There he sat, cowering against the wall, blubbering like a child.
  • Somehow that thought doesn't seem so foreign, the way she's whimpering and carrying on like that, shaking and blubbering like an overgrown and very ugly baby.
  • An autopsy showed he had taken coke, ecstasy and speed while other clubbers said he had also been boozing heavily. The Sun
  • They say clubbers are being put off by costly door entry, expensive drinks and the venues being crowded. The Sun
  • In the capital, clubbers drink Kabul slings and canned Russian beer.
  • The hunter managed to reprime without being noticed, and he made a vow that this apparent lubber should henceforth be watched with a lynx-eye. The Riflemen of the Miami
  • And clubbers take advantage of its long-lasting effects. The Sun
  • At second glance, though, Switters would have bet this sulky slubberdegullion couldn't tail the Statue of Liberty. Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climates
  • Stop blubbering and tell me what's wrong.
  • ‘Thou lubber, better for thee that thou wert not now, nor ever hadst been born, if indeed thou tremblest before this man, and art so terribly afraid; an old man too he is, and foredone with the travail that is come upon him. Book XVIII
  • Now she's blubbering away all over again about something else.
  • Though their blubber is very thin, some of these whales will yield you upwards of thirty gallons of oil. Moby Dick
  • Paramore shook up their pop-metal repertoire last year with The Only Exception, a blubbery ballad about wuv. Glee is back but which song will be the new Don't Stop Believing?
  • When a number of us landlubbers became quite seasick, Victor decided it would be funny to capture the experience on film and began taking photos of his employees tossing their cookies overboard.
  • East gave a little ghost of a smile, and his hand tightened, and then went loose in mine — and I found I was blubbering and gasping, and thinking about Rugby, and hot murphies at Sally's shop, and a small fag limping along pathetically after the players at Big Side — because he couldn't play himself, you see, being lame. Flashman In The Great Game
  • The landlubberly sport coat [above, center], meanwhile, originally derived from the tweedy, robust coats worn while assisting in the untimely end of feathered or furry creatures. Esquire.com Article Feed
  • The Enterprise is a vessel that defies the landlubber's imagination.
  • She blubbered, completely unable to stop herself and completely humiliated that she was crying like a madwoman in front of Jordan!
  • Ever since he pointed out that I have gained a little "flubber" on my hips, I've been scared that that is what everyone is looking at. Jenna-bear Diary Entry
  • Overweight, blubbery, unfit bodies are no great advantage at 19,000 feet and so the bodies were whipped into (some sort of) shape.
  • While the sunset is a moment for quiet reflection for landlubbers like me, for the seamen it is the time for extra vigilance.
  • From the wharf at Selby's we watched with careless interest the lubberly manoeuvre performed of bringing the yacht to anchor, and the equally lubberly manoeuvre of sending the small boat ashore. The King of the Greeks
  • He suddenly remembered Dumbledore's idea of a few words: 'nitwit', 'oddment', 'blubber' and 'tweak 1, and again, had to suppress a grin ... what was the matter with him? Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
  • Mum asked me why I was crying and I blubbered, ‘Everything.’
  • Large quantities of unused frozen meat and blubber have been found on rubbish dumps after recent drives.
  • Dear me, this indifferent Antenna bastardly blubbered at this ubiquitous. Planet-x.com.au » Caravans accessories Caravans Antenna travel park accessories
  • All being ready, secure the lubber's point of the pelorus at North and clamp the sight vane to the sun's magnetic bearing at the time you have figured to take the first heading. Lectures in Navigation
  • I decided to do it just because I have lived with a little too much blubber around my middle for my entire life although the rest of me is quite lean and fat-less.
  • Lies on a reinforced bed all day, a vast mountain of blubber. The Sun
  • The UK has become a vast blubber mountain. The Sun
  • A soul infused night is on offer tonight at Kendal's Tintos with a hard-core clubber turned international DJ pro.
  • Kevin Rudd's family were "blubbering" again in Brisbane on Tuesday night, but this time they were happy tears celebrating the launch of daughter Jessica's first novel. The Sydney Morning Herald News Headlines
  • And instead of saying "I would like to say a few words: Nitwit! blubber! oddment! tweak! Harry Potter and the Dropped Ball
  • To escape the blubbery kisses of great aunts and the beery, fag - fugged breaths of distant cousins, we children used to escape outside, playing a game called Jumping the Gardens, which was modelled on the Grand National.
  • The UK has become a vast blubber mountain. The Sun
  • Is it the thin grayish covering, or is it the twelve to fifteen inch layer of blubber which surrounds his body?
  • And when you work in the card room, you have to know how to run about every piece of machinery in there, and there's different things, and he liked to be a slubber, and they wanted to put him on drawing or something else. Oral History Interview with Edna Y. Hargett, July 19, 1979. Interview H-0163. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • April 12, 2008 at 12:20 pm hmmmmm, if de bodi comin owtta dat cyrs..cihyr…thring rapped rown ..matches dat fase fir size, could be moar ob a flubberby dan a flutterbye One day I become shedding, bad-tempered butterfly. - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • He now beheld Lenny rising with some difficulty -- still panting hard -- and with hysterical sounds akin to what is vulgarly called blubbering -- his fine new waistcoat sprinkled with his own blood which flowed from his nose -- nose that seemed to Lenny The International Magazine, Volume 2, No. 3, February, 1851
  • She sobbed, wailed, blubbered, howled, cried and whatever people do to express sorrow hoping that her tears and crying will bring her other half back.
  • The spire is the knee joint from the leg of the lubber grasshopper mentioned above. Archive 2009-06-28
  • On board, her computer brings a regular flow of e-mails sent through the website that tracks her progress - messages from friends, sailors, landlubbers and schoolchildren.
  • Could it be that the economy of Old Town and Swindon would suffer if the clubbers and boozers were curtailed by the very alcohol-free zones which are being suggested?
  • They try to keep still, to conserve their resources of blubber and mother's milk.
  • Yea, and to tickle our noses with Speargrass to make them bleed, and then to beslubber our garments with it and swear it was the blood of true men. The plant-lore & garden-craft of Shakespeare
  • A lubber is someone who does not go to sea, who stays on the land. Archive 2008-09-01
  • Ye olde land lubbers will be desertin 'like bilge rats from sinkin' ship ... Thursday Thirteen - The ARRRGHHHH! edition
  • The answer is all too mundane: The blobs are old whale blubber.
  • The 'lubber' part of it was too clearly aimed at me to be mistaken; but I could not discover in it anything but nonsense all the way through to the end. Cast Away in the Cold An Old Man's Story of a Young Man's Adventures, as Related by Captain John Hardy, Mariner
  • So in lieu of packing, I spent Saturday sniffling and blubbering over two years of Scottish detritus.
  • Even the wives and daughters of low tradesmen, who, like shovel-nosed sharks, prey upon the blubber of those uncouth whales of fortune, are infected with the same rage of displaying their importance; and the slightest indisposition serves them for a pretext to insist upon being conveyed to Bath, where they may hobble country-dances and cotillons among lordlings, squires, counsellors, and clergy. The Expedition of Humphry Clinker
  • The Teeth-chatter or Gum-didder of Lubberly Lusks. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • Plant about two years and they started tearing out the speeders and putting in an improved slubber that would take the place of the speeder. Oral History Interview with Lacy Wright, March 10, 1975. Interview E-0017. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
  • I'm less proud of the fact that I have now blubbered," he joked, as he struggled to contain his tears. Australia Gets First Female Prime Minister
  • I've said before that my metabolism wavers sinuously between stallion and walrus, and I've been getting noticeably blubbery in recent months.
  • The storeman, plastered with snow, reappears hot and triumphant before the cook, but this dignitary is awkwardly kneading the dough of wholemeal scones, and the messman is feeding the fire with seal-blubber to ensure a "quick" oven. The Home of the Blizzard Being the Story of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition, 1911-1914
  • An issue about human mountains of wobbling blubber in danger of making their country sink under their weight. The Sun
  • A large piece of whale blubber, bearing the marks of fleshing knives, has been discovered off west Falkland.
  • There he sat, cowering against the wall, blubbering like a child.
  • In a good, old landlubberly manner we hitched Gadabout to a tree and waited to see if the rising tide would make a way for us. Virginia: the Old Dominion
  • Behind him and down, in his landlubber 's way of seeing things: downward to the Earth.
  • I have it on good authority that the whale thinks that this ballyhoo is a bunch of, well, blubber.
  • Then from the starving cagework city a horde of jerkined dwarfs, my people, with flayers’ knives, running, scaling, hacking in green blubbery whalemeat. Ulysses
  • In other words, there's more to whales and sharks than blubber and dorsal fins; and the sooner we acknowledge this, the longer we may last in the evolutionary game of snakes-and-ladders.
  • That blubber is something of the consistence of firm, close-grained beef, but tougher, more elastic and compact, and ranges from eight or ten to twelve and fifteen inches in thickness. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • A German officer, Captain von Lübbers was assigned to the Department of Prisoners of War in the Ministry of War early in World War I. Von Lübbers served as the military escort to Archibald Harte and Christian Phildius as they made their initial investigations of German prison camps in March 1915. Pursuit of an 'Unparalleled Opportunity': The American YMCA and Prisoner of War Diplomacy among the Central Power Nations during World War I
  • The whale is rich in blubber.
  • You are a pathetic little person who seeks nothing but attention and I enjoy poking your blubbery pale belly. Think Progress » Pentagon Shooter Was Right-Wing, Anti-Government Terrorist
  • For clubbers, indie kids and metalheads, the choice is dire.
  • Clubbers bopped on the open air, split-level dance floor until the early hours of the morning.
  • A word every prep fears, due to the fact they hate seeing a little bit of blubber on anyone, especially themselves.
  • Today's young clubbers would've been baffled. Times, Sunday Times
  • And what I meant, '' he continued in a resentful tone, ` ` is that their republican god, which is neither stick nor stone, but seems to be some kind of lubber, has never given us seamen a chief like that one the soldiers have got ashore. '' The Rover
  • The best bars attract a diverse clientele, and the Local pulls in post-work lingerers, students, canoodling couples and pre-clubbers in equal measure.
  • Limbaugh is a blubbery, drug-addicted hypocrite — the perfect face of the Republican Party. zooman Says: Matthew Yglesias » John McCain, Dittohead
  • He now beheld Lenny rising with some difficulty, still panting hard, and with hysterical sounds akin to what is vulgarly called blubbering, his fine new waistcoat sprinkled with his own blood, which flowed from his nose, -- nose that seemed to Lenny Fairfield's feelings to be a nose no more, but a swollen, gigantic, mountainous Slawkenbergian excrescence; in fact, he felt all nose! My Novel — Complete
  • Huge wages were paid to men on the rigs in those days, and were the envy of us landlubbers.
  • Is it the thin grayish covering, or is it the twelve to fifteen inch layer of blubber which surrounds his body?
  • A blonde Manhattan nightclubber, Cori Rist, 31, was added last night to the list of those with whom the married father of two had 'transgressed'. Home | Mail Online
  • She pouted out t her blubber-lips, as if to bellows up wind and sputter in her horse-nostrils; and her chin was curdled, and more than usually prominent with passion.
  • What we land-lubbers had to relate has been given in outline in the preceding chapters. The South Pole~ Northward
  • Take some exercise and get rid of some of that blubber!
  • He whinnied for his lost mother all that first day and night, blubbering in the corner of the pasture, and he clung to his resentment as he grew into a half-ton adolescent.
  • Aquatic birds and mammals, equipped with subcutaneous blubber, may also have a covering of fur or feathers.
  • There is cuddly fur and downy fluff to stroke, rubber-like blubber and armour-like scales to feel - mammals certainly come in all manner of wonderful varieties.
  • The bar and DJ decks are located along the back wall, allowing clubbers to enjoy the music and the picturesque views.
  • Inside the hour the ship was over on her beam ends, the lubberly cowards climbing up her side and hanging on in the rigging. THE "FRANCIS SPAIGHT"
  • Back in the light, I turned to find an eight-year-old blubbering at my side.
  • I burst into tears, blubbering to his retreating form.
  • The likeliest cause for your expanding waistline is just excess blubber. The Sun
  • And it's packed with detail, too - crowds of moshing clubbers, roomfuls of half-cut horny partygoers, and more - none of which detracts from the important elements in each panel.
  • Surrounded by snow and ice, an Aleut hunter slices slabs of raw whale blubber for dinner.
  • We wander, awestruck, amid these languid mountains of blubber. Times, Sunday Times

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