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rambunctious

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[ UK /ɹæmbˈʌŋkʃəs/ ]
[ US /ɹæmˈbəŋkʃəs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. noisy and lacking in restraint or discipline
    beneath the rumbustious surface of his paintings is sympathy for the vulnerability of ordinary human beings
    a boisterous crowd
    a robustious group of teenagers
    a social gathering that became rambunctious and out of hand
    an unruly class

How To Use rambunctious In A Sentence

  • Nearby a nanny was keeping her eye on the four rambunctious children.
  • This is very different from Michael Skakel back in 1975, who was by all accounts a very rambunctious kid.
  • Despite a warning to follow me step by step, one of the young airmen was a little rambunctious and proceeded at his own pace.
  • Victoria Gottis is a divorced single mom raising three rambunctious little teens.
  • They are more rambunctious, they are more competitive, they are more likely to get in trouble.
  • Clarence remains the most rambunctious of the two, Carl the most laid back, the philosopher.
  • Once the pipeline does not pass, the tear stack will initiate the inflammation, if the cornea will have the flesh wound, the question will be possibly more rambunctious .
  • There's no mistaking any of the songs here for easygoing Philly soul or rambunctious New Orleans funk.
  • Peck is randy and rambunctious, especially in the crazy scene where his horse keeps butting him from behind.
  • Its mix of action and pop culture-soaked nerd comedy isn't something we've seen much of in the half-hour format and while it was a bit jarring to jump from Chewbacca jokes to semi-tense action sequences, the overall effect was akin to watching the mildly rambunctious lovechild of Chuck and Better Off Ted, as nannied by that nifty Robert Redford caper "Sneakers. Watercooler: Breaking In (Kind of) Cracks Us Up
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