How To Use Rigmarole In A Sentence

  • I would need to go through the rigmarole of applying for both accounts.
  • Howard had been through the rigmarole of selling a company many times.
  • We ought to learn business like everybody else, go through the same rigmarole.
  • For the body withering under the polluted skies of the City, with all the energies drained by the daily rigmarole of life, this is manna from heaven!
  • The customs officials made us go through the rigmarole of opening up our bags for inspection.
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  • It took quite a time of fiddling about before I found a comfortable position and then, in cases where driving is shared, the whole rigmarole has to be endured all over again when you get back behind the wheel.
  • But then came the page banners and pop-up ads and the whole rigmarole started all over again.
  • He had to go through the usual rigmarole of signing legal papers in order to complete the business deal.
  • Dear Harsnet, he wrote, why do you persist in this rigmarole of refusing even to acknowledge my existence?
  • When the rigmarole of having a bath was over, the bath had to be emptied, dragging the bath to the back door and tipping the contents out into the yard.
  • Your mail comes at a most auspicious moment, and the precise nature of your inquiry saves me from the rigmarole of empty theory.
  • The customs officials made us go through the rigmarole of opening up our bags for inspection.
  • He had to go through the usual rigmarole of signing legal papers in order to complete the business deal.
  • Dear Harsnet, he wrote, why do you persist in this rigmarole of refusing even to acknowledge my existence?
  • She repeated the whole rigmarole, reading the address, even noting how far Abba Hayil was below sea-level. LOADED QUESTIONS
  • When important decisions need to be taken, instead of having the rigmarole of members voting, simply toss a coin - or even a caber to decide the outcome.
  • The pomposity and rigmarole they put directors through is astounding.
  • So aleatoric poetry could be described with historical exactitude as a rigmarole.
  • But nimbyism, the permitting rigmarole, and a powerful environmental lobby are facts of life in Israel too, and Benjamin Netanyahu's government hasn't helped matters by jacking up taxes on energy companies now that sizable resources have been discovered. Could Israel Become an Energy Giant?
  • He had to go through the usual rigmarole of signing legal papers in order to complete the business deal.
  • I went through this rigmarole for the next hour or so.
  • I'd been on boats where people went diving, and I'd watched the rigmarole of getting kitted up in diving gear.
  • He had to go through the usual rigmarole of signing legal papers in order to complete the business deal.
  • The others were standing around, drinks in hand, congratulating my cousin on his initiation, and asking us amused tones what we thought of the crazy rigmarole.
  • There were popping sounds, birds warbling, half-stifled cries - of rigmarole of street sounds that just totally entranced me.
  • The book is packed with stimulating philosophical (and depressingly prophetic) allusion within the author's own field, but ends up as a bit of a rigmarole.
  • Maudlin, but trying not to show it, Patrick observes the rigmarole unfold as predicted. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • The terminal rigmarole: when he's got to stand in the dock and be examined. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • He had to go through the usual rigmarole of signing legal papers in order to complete the business deal.
  • I couldn't face the whole rigmarole of getting a work permit again.
  • Dear Harsnet, he wrote, why do you persist in this rigmarole of refusing even to acknowledge my existence?
  • We very rarely get to see any of it, because we all assume no-one else would be interested in the dull rigmarole of our lives.
  • I couldn't focus on an abstract location, so I focused on the last place I remember clearest before this whole rigmarole started.
  • They should just take less tax from us instead of making us go through months of rigmarole for nothing!
  • But what I liked about ‘isotropic rigmarole’ was its prosody, anyhow.
  • So you quickly tire of having to go through the rigmarole.
  • If we'd gone much further it would have been dark before we finished all this rigmarole.
  • ‘Isotropic rigmarole’ is a cute collocation, with a texture like chrome and bone.
  • They are for people who know what they want and who don't want to go through the rigmarole of talking to a sales assistant.
  • He had to go through the usual rigmarole of signing legal papers in order to complete the business deal.
  • He also claims to diffuse any rising panic with what seems a painful rigmarole - setting an alarm to go off hourly three hours before he is due to rise, to try to confront his nerves head - on before they grow to menacing size.
  • Dear Harsnet, he wrote, why do you persist in this rigmarole of refusing even to acknowledge my existence?
  • Then there is the routine stop and search and the rigmarole at airport passport control.
  • I can get you out of here whenever you like without going through all the rigmarole. THE DISPOSSESSED
  • all that academic rigmarole was a waste of time
  • He didn't know why he bothered with this rigmarole.
  • So aleatoric poetry could be described with historical exactitude as a rigmarole.

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