How To Use Rabbit warren In A Sentence

  • They've tried to search that rabbit warren but it's impossible.
  • The council offices were a real rabbit warren.
  • The result is one glorious rabbit warren of nooks, steps, crannies, fireplaces, lounges and courtyards, shot through with an enormous tree, topped off with pot-strewn terraces.
  • The town is a rabbit warren of winding alleys where urchins play seemingly constant games of street football. The Sun
  • Elsewhere, extensive pillow mounds show that the site was used as a rabbit warren later on.
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  • For this purpose, keepers of parks, rabbit warrens and heronries were ordered to produce venison and wildfoul for their masters' tables.
  • Down in the rabbit warren of watering holes off Walking Street, and opposite the Marine Bar, is a new live music bar/nightclub.
  • The layout continued in this manner -- a series of rambling wings connected by a rabbit warren of corridors and narrow staircases. AN UNLIKELY COUNTESS: Lily Budge and the 13th Earl of Galloway
  • At the end of the day even if all the work was done on the centre, we'd still have a large hall upstairs and a rabbit warren of rooms.
  • The building was a real rabbit warren of corridors.
  • It was a rabbit warren of a lot of little rooms.
  • I need to get back to Assisus through this rabbit warren with both my legs still intact.
  • The officials and other 20 walkers were gone, leaving Norm to make his own way through the rabbit warren to the track.
  • The Breckland Heath has always been interfered with by ancient flint workers and farmers, the military, the rabbits and the rabbit warreners.
  • Elsewhere, extensive pillow mounds show that the site was used as a rabbit warren later on.
  • Two will be described here: pillow mounds and former rabbit warrens, and decoys for taking wildfowl.
  • Its interest is that within it survive all the elements of a medieval forest: great timber trees, coppice woods, pollards, scrub, grassland and fen, deer and cattle, and a rabbit warren.
  • If, for instance, you need to clear a rabbit warren, you have to ensure that there is not a badger down there too - they are protected animals.
  • They nest in burrows, often taking over rabbit warrens.
  • It was all a far cry from the 1897 Irish Times article which described the course as ‘a rabbit warren below the village, where a golfer requires limitless patience and an inexhaustible supply of balls’.
  • Number 10 is a rabbit warren of corridors and rooms, and boasts perhaps the most famous front door in the world. The Sun
  • Meet local people from Thetford's past, from the revolutionary philosopher Thomas Paine to the Sikh hero Maharajah Duleep Singh and from rabbit warreners to railway workers.
  • It has become a rabbit warren for drug dealers and gun runners. The Sun
  • The half-dozen or so low cigar-shaped mounds are pillow mounds relating to a more recent rabbit warren.
  • The council offices were a real rabbit warren.
  • Worst thing: Rabbit warren of corridors. Times, Sunday Times
  • We have ripped out al of the awful rabbit warren of rooms and are hopefully on the way to converting it back to the former glory that it once was.
  • Its interest is that within it survive all the elements of a medieval forest: great timber trees, coppice woods, pollards, scrub, grassland and fen, deer and cattle, and a rabbit warren.
  • The entire building had become a giant rabbit warren of beaverboard and drywall cubicles for almost 5,000 people.
  • Further houses were bought, and municipal functions developed like a rabbit warren, including eventually the city archives, prison, orphanage, post office, and fire station.
  • He knew of a couple of scurrier dens and rabbit warrens which he hoped had remained his secret. Damia's Children
  • I can't remember ever bolting a weasel from a rabbit warren.
  • Two will be described here: pillow mounds and former rabbit warrens, and decoys for taking wildfowl.
  • The hostel had 25 two and three-tiered bunks on the ground floor and a virtual rabbit warren of about 20 rooms on the first floor, with four or five people per room.
  • By the 15th cent., the palace was a rabbit warren of rooms and corridors, swarming with servants and lawyers, and liable to flooding.

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