How To Use Shamble In A Sentence

  • I have not seen such a drunken shambles for ages - he was really struggling, slurring his words, the lot.
  • What a complete and utter shambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • Desire kept his head down and held his gait to an ordinary shamble, all to come as close as he could. HAMMERFALL
  • An emergency squad of 600 plumbers and electricians has been drafted in to repair the shambles. The Sun
  • I mean, hell, if I was accused of molesting children, had a face falling apart, a career in shambles, and had become a mockery of my former self, I'd be on drugs too. Archive: Oct 08 - Mar 09
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • As they watched, one of the players shambled over to the jukebox and fed a handful of coins into it.
  • Instead of falling dead, though, the figure shambled after his head.
  • The room was in shambles and their master laid crumpled and bleeding on the floor.
  • Gardiner, reinforced by so-called sportsmen from other parts of the state, of all the park elk they could kill, -- bulls, cows and calves, -- because a large band wandered across the line into the shambles of Gardiner, on Buffalo Flats. Our Vanishing Wild Life Its Extermination and Preservation
  • In the Little Shambles, too, there are many curious details in the high gables, pargeting and oriel windows. Yorkshire
  • Around 7000 fans have voiced their opinions on the Scottish football omnishambles through the SFA's national fans survey.
  • A woman shouted in Spanish in the hallway, cursing a man's retreating shamble. THE LAST RAVEN
  • Its times like this i thank God i was born and bred in Aus! why is it when someone complains about, the mess around our island someone else has to try and turn the whole scene around, justiffing what is true and what is not. we dont need photos to poove a point? just walk down the sliema / gzira sea front after a saterday or sunday evening and open your eyes. its a shambles. plastic bottles undar benches. waste from take aways ect. Timesofmalta.com
  • He said: 'It was a shambles on air. Times, Sunday Times
  • Everything was in shambles, set alight with fire and misted by smoke.
  • The civilian chief of the TU is a shambles and a liability and nobody wants to work under him, and the rumour machine spreads fast about what he’s like. Leave My Kitten Alone « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • The countryside is a shambles, full of cut-throats and wild animals.
  • He said: 'This department is an utter shambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • All weariness faded from the faces of the wayworn travellers, even the very camels and asses, shrunk, as most of them were, to mere skeletons, seemed to understand that labour and blows were done with, and forgetting their loads, shambled unurged down the stony path. Elissa
  • A nation wondered what the next level up from omnishambles was.
  • But he had been sadly mistaken and his life was in a shambles now because of it.
  • The shambles has echoes of the tax credits fiasco which left families to survive on charity food parcels. The Sun
  • He was hauled before a court next morning which he claims was a shambles.
  • Alan Johnson admits Labour has been 'maladroit' in its handling of ministers to acknowledge they've made a shambles of immigration - and then two weekend, with the universal rejection of his international transaction WN.com - Articles related to Obesity in childhood
  • On a lunch-time it's never been easier to walk up the Shambles and its lying-in-wait cobbles since the early hours of the morning when balance aforethought may have been slightly influenced by a few tipsy tinctures.
  • So in a daze of confusion she entered her house to find her room in shambles and a shadow of a person sitting on her bed.
  • The teen-agers rose to their feet and began to shamble towards Nick, sloping their shoulders as they came.
  • In this afternoon’s Queen Speech debate (quite how our esteemed representatives can spend two days debating seven minutes worth of platitudes is beyond me), the Health Secretary, Andy Burnham, described the Tories’ shambolic health policies as an ‘omnishambles’ - very ‘hip’ phraseology stolen from an Armando Ianucci penned Malcolm Tucker rant. Smoking Guns and the Morality of Parliamentary Privilege
  • Sick patients shambled along the hospital corridors.
  • Young Dick learned death — ­not the ordered, decent death of civilization, wherein doctors and nurses and hypodermics ease the stricken one into the darkness, and ceremony and function and flowers and undertaking institutions conspire to give a happy leave-taking and send-off to the departing shade, but sudden death, primitive death, ugly and ungarnished, like the death of a steer in the shambles or a fat swine stuck in the jugular. CHAPTER V
  • After the short ceremony, these loutish tourists shambled off in their jeans and high nuisance-factor anoraks.
  • He turned with a skip and shambled away, whistling.
  • After two minutes of stumbling, the song switches gears, grinding against itself before going for a brief jaunt, and then concluding with a reprisal of the introductory shamble.
  • We don't know about you, but if we were anywhere near the band's equipment, we'd be trying to half-inch it, not destroy it but that may say more about us than the Babyshambles fans.
  • As they watched, one of the players shambled over to the jukebox and fed a handful of coins into it.
  • Compared to the omnishambles budget, tax credits is a blip. Times, Sunday Times
  • Against the most potent forward line in the country, what had been a shambles became a solid spine.
  • I don't see an argument here that the economy was in shambles until Dole and Gingrich took power in the Congress. Did the Bush Tax Cut Fail?, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The NHS and education systems are a disgraceful shambles and the illegal asylum situation is not only a joke, it is dangerous.
  • Doherty fronts the Babyshambles, who he says won't stand for it if he slides back into drug abuse.
  • It was the year of the omnishambles budget. Times, Sunday Times
  • Infocult: keeping one eyestalk fixed on the economy as it shambles ever onward. Information, Culture, Policy, Education:
  • The meeting was a shambles from start to finish.
  • In 1853, Louisa Dalton Bird Cunningham was aboard a steamer on the Potomac sailing from Philadelphia to her plantation in South Carolina when she saw Mount Vernon in a shambles.
  • The coyote shambles, crow-hops, keeps his head low, and without fur, his now visible pizzle is a sad red protuberance, his hind legs the backward image of a bandy-legged grandfather, stripped. The Best American Poetry 2010
  • What few telecom stocks Peter had owned had gone south long ago, leaving his retirement scheme in a shambles. DEAD LINES
  • Another of the mouthlike openings around the edge of the arena opened, and one of the furry people shambled out, weaving weakly from side to side as he came, a spear in his scaled paws. Star Born
  • It began its slow shamble towards the car, ignoring the headlights that cut through the fog in front of it and shone in its eyes.
  • Currently the education system is in a shambles.
  • King, and turn the city into a shambles, "-- with a mighty oath --" he shall abye it. The Armourer's Prentices
  • It's less omnishambles, more omnirambles as everyone walks out. Times, Sunday Times
  • But as the movie shambles along, its title creeps up on it, wedgie-like. Vue Weekly
  • Our incompetent government politicians create omnishambles for a very simple reason—they are doing the wrong job.
  • With the private sector in shambles, the Federal government is the only one with enough juice left to fix anything. Notes On Obama's Press Conference - The Consumerist
  • The economy is in a complete shambles.
  • Forget the scare stories you heard when the lights went out: America's electrical grid isn't in a shambles.
  • An educational system based on survival of the fittest competition now in shambles: Think Progress » Bill’s Late Father Irving Kristol: ‘My Poor Son Has Got It Wrong Again’
  • And, not to be forgotten, they earn gazillions of dollars every time they lace up their cleats and shamble out to the field of play.
  • The shambles has echoes of the tax credits fiasco which left families to survive on charity food parcels. The Sun
  • His walk shambled, shuffled, and skidded along the tiles, and as he did it he felt the heat of shame rising on the back of his neck in a nearly-tangible red cloud that matched the orange sunrise of his attire.
  • He picked up the pace into a ragged shamble, his knee throbbing with pain. CORMORANT
  • With daisywheel printed names for all the knobs, this looks like a bit of a shambles, and therefore intruiguing. EBay of the day: Crazy Homemade British Synth
  • Both acts performed on the Sunday of the event, Razorlight entertaining on the main stage whilst Babyshambles took to the NME / Radio 1 Stage.
  • The elf tried to get comfortable, turning and twisting until his bedroll was a shambles, then he had to sit up and untangle himself. Dragons of Winter Night
  • The ferry barges across the seafront for its dock with categoric straightness, welcome after the shambles and indirection of Portsmouth.
  • This woman, this humourless bloodless shambles of a person, was entirely sure that the sign was not open to interpretation by her or anyone else.
  • A view of Victoria Street shows part of the cathedral and the Old Shambles area of the city blitzed by German bombers in the Second World War.
  • They are not just a shambles at the back but all over the pitch. The Sun
  • By the time Rex got things under control, the place was a shambles. ROSES ARE FOR THE RICH
  • I don't want to come home and find my half in a shambles.
  • But, reverting to the new phases in the ever-shifting emotionalism of a godless world, with which marriage has become a question of barter -- a mere lot-drawing of lambs for the shambles -- he compared the happy queenly life of our Irish mother with that of the victim of fashion, or that of uncatholic lands, where a poor girl passes from one state of slavery to another. My New Curate
  • Happy Mondays – Do It Better Mr Manshambles himself, Shaun William Ryder, garbles a long list of some things or other, but I was too busy doing a Bez to notice. Readers recommend: Songs about pubs and bars
  • All of which adds up to an utter shambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • The dog-eyed man shambled resignedly away in search of a new target.
  • That, of course, is what they said in baseball and now the sport is a discredited shambles.
  • The second is that the first scene is such a shambles it only makes any sense when you reach the end.
  • Granted, they still shamble, but it seems they've started to think, to use tools and to react to their environment.
  • Another thirty - four wounded in the fighting, which left the area a shambles.
  • Farming, ironically, is the mainstay of the economy, but the agricultural sector is in shambles.
  • The place was a shambles; there had been turkeys in one room, pheasants in another. Times, Sunday Times
  • The press conference was a complete shambles.
  • The Life West Golf Classic features a four-person "shamble" (modified scramble format). Chiropractic News
  • The omnishambles at the Ministry of Defence is such that, astonishingly, it may have supplanted the Home Office as the government department least fit-for-purpose. The Chopper Wars
  • Once I have written this, it's enter soundtrack, cue vacuum, then it's curtains for this shambles.
  • Three-quarters of the ground is a shambles and consists of seats bolted to original terracing with a new roof.
  • He must certainly wish the clock was stuck in the omnishambles period. Times, Sunday Times
  • After the party, the house was a total/complete shambles.
  • shamble" foursome, and a $25,000 hole-in-one prize. Chiropractic News
  • With inflation running at 25 per cent, the economy is a shambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • The butchers' shambles, where animals were slaughtered and sold on Sundays, abutted the courthouse.
  • She must have walked for an hour or two, heading nowhere in particular, when she felt a weird, sudden urge to go to the Shambles, a local ruined building, with no roof.
  • Less than two weeks into the U.S. "intervasion" of Haiti, a hastily conceived plan that called for cooperation between Haitian security forces and U.S. troops was a shambles. Caught In The Middle
  • His thighs pump and his hips push, and his chest heaves, and it’s Dean, uncumbered by gravity, that thin shirt pressed against his chest, and all out, running, streaking through the shambled streets, outrunning the croats like they was a-standin’ still. Supernatural: The End - Pink Raygun.com
  • Sick patients shambled along the hospital corridors.
  • Every other coalition policy initiative has been an unmitigated omnishambles and this one is going to be different?
  • The change in course is the fourth major U-turn the Chancellor has made since his omnishambles Budget in March.
  • The economy is in shamble, his rating has plunged lower than any president's in recent history. Biden calls Bush comments 'bulls**t'
  • The buildings soon turned from downtown shamble shacks to upscale skyscrapers, apartments, and business buildings.
  • We regard the band as a thorough shambles.
  • Labour talk of a new train terminus, but our rail system is a shambles. The Sun
  • If I take up space here writing all the other theories that were once, supposedly, absolute and the foundation of all knowledge and which are now tottering if not in shambles, I'll say nothing else. [GUEST POST] Sarah A. Hoyt on The Death of Science Fiction: It Ain't Over Till The Fat Droid Sings
  • Clips and graphics are stitched together with a droll, deadpan voiceover and often a declamatory musical score, though Moore's ursine baseball-capped form does not itself shamble into view until well into the film.
  • Tories called it 'a shambles '. The Sun
  • Each January I pause, in my shamble toward senility, to honor some of the people, things and events I've written about in the previous 12 months.
  • The economy is a shambles and money seems to be traded with little thought for disadvantaged members of society. The Sun
  • At the end of the line, the local authority careers service is called in to rescue what remains of this shambles.
  • Josh Davis has just shambled on to the stage, pottering about and digging through a tatty backpack for cartridges and CDs.
  • In shambles, pavements once laid with tiles were chaotically dug up.
  • The roof of a beach house at Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina sits in shambles August 27 due to high winds from Hurricane Irene.
  • But at other times they shamble, heads askew, wrists limp, legs at odd angles. Movie Review: Zombieland « Colleen Anderson
  • It's been a dreadful year for the broadband industry, with DSL phone service, particularly, in a shambles.
  • Ate my mind and then shambled on his — and then shambled on his way Archive 2009-08-21
  • A projection screen flickers into life and Hope Of The States shamble onstage in that endearingly scruffy way that seems rather at odds with their borderline-highbrow music.
  • She turned and watched Alex shamble into the room.
  • The outwardly crisp style of government it satirised has descended into a very public ‘omnishambles’. Satire is dead
  • An emergency squad of 600 plumbers and electricians has been drafted in to repair the shambles. The Sun
  • He found the place 'an absolute shambles '. Times, Sunday Times
  • Alan Johnson admits Labour has been 'maladroit' in its handling of ministers to acknowledge they've made a shambles of immigration - and then two WN.com - Articles related to Walmart Black Friday 2009 ads sales full list of items
  • An almost matronly St. John shambled out onto the Jane Mallett Theatre stage in a wrinkled pigeon-colored number that had to be one of the ugliest frocks to see stage lights this season.
  • The tournament was an 18-hole, four-man "shamble" format. MMD Newswire: Press Release News Wire
  • Our binmen have worked efficiently and cleanly over the years but the last few weeks have been a shambles as the new system gets under way.
  • His and Regina's bedroom was a shambles, but the twin-bedded room prepared for me was untouched. In The Frame
  • Fishamble Theatre Company presents the work of one of Ireland's most acclaimed writers, Maeve Binchy, adapted and directed for the stage by Jim Culleton.
  • This whole business is a complete shambles and a total embarrassment. The Sun
  • As they watched, one of the players shambled over to the jukebox and fed a handful of coins into it.
  • As you might expect of 'master race' zombies, these zombies don't shamble, they run. At The Trailer Park: Alien Trespass, Goemon, Dead Snow, Planet 51, Hybrid, Land of the Lost, Mutant Chronicles
  • Addressing this vexed issue has instead become something close to a shambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • The meeting was a shambles from start to finish.
  • With the economy in shambles, healthcare reform imploding and tax and spend Democrats running amok is the a newswothy story or just another cheesy photo-op for a pitiful president? Beer choice at Obama meeting touches off new debate
  • A few of the boldest and wisest forsook the fires of the gods, which had now become a shambles, and fled into the forest, where, in the end, they starved to death or were eaten by wolves. The Famine
  • They've just shambled off up the road a bit, probably because she's gobbed all over the pavement outside mine so they need to find a clean bit.
  • The other man, in nondescript garments that were both of the sea and shore, and that must have been uncomfortably hot, slouched and shambled like an overgrown ape. Chapter 14
  • Peter is not reduced to nervous shambles, he barks back at his guard and engineers a reasonable escape plan.
  • Sick patients shambled along the hospital corridors.
  • Catheringnettes, Lizzy and Lissy Mycock, from Street Flesh-shambles, were they moon at aube with hespermun and I their covin guardient, I would not know to contact such gretched youngsteys in my ways from Haddem or any suistersees or heiresses of theirn, claiming by, through, or under them. Finnegans Wake
  • The moucher now carries a bill-hook, and as he shambles along the road keeps a sharp look-out for briars. The Amateur Poacher
  • Still remaining are the constant reminders of the devastation left behind; trees left in branchless tangles, roofless shambles of hand-laid stone foundations of once century-old structures, empty weed-filled lots, the constant traffic and beeping of backhoes, and the bare slab foundations of what were once homes but now have only haunting stairways leading down to what were once basements that, luckily, saved the lives of many local residents. Michael DeJong: Greensburg: An Eco 9/11
  • Their use of the words "nurtured" and "rich" have a certain ironic flair considering Africville was in shambles, with no health services, sewage or running water. AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed
  • We reduced the place to a shambles. Christianity Today
  • Quite frankly, our elections have become an uncontrolled shambles.
  • She would do well to begin by asking them what they think of the utter shambles that is our public examinations system. Times, Sunday Times
  • The list of celebrities for the Sunday "shamble," a modification of the scramble format, is not yet available, but Bill Murray, Kevin Costner, Vince Gill and George Brett have participated in the past. IndyStar.com Top Stories
  • Rae turned and saw a waiter, dressed in a clean blue uniform, shamble towards their table.
  • He recovered peace, he recovered provinces, and he recovered the finances, which were in a shambles after the civil war.
  • Twickenham's search for a performance director has turned into a shambles after the Rugby Football Union did an about-turn over its requirements for the position. Civil war erupts as RFU clears path for Sir Clive Woodward's return
  • The next day, the housekeeper arrived to find the place in a shambles.
  • By evening, David and Yohanna's house was in a shambles.
  • A second later, a large woman shambled out into the darkness.
  • Desire kept his head down and held his gait to an ordinary shamble, all to come as close as he could. HAMMERFALL
  • The place was a shambles and a danger. The Sun
  • Not much to look at, because the front lawn and the drive to the Manor were a shambles.
  • My body's in shambles encrusted with brambles that sharpen the air I breathe.
  • The coyote shambles, crow-hops, keeps his head low, and without fur, his now visible pizzle is a sad red protuberance, his hind legs the backward image of a bandy-legged grandfather, stripped. The Best American Poetry 2010
  • From the shambles of the aldermanic elections and the final collapse of the Kelly-Nash leadership, Daley walked out even stronger.
  • After the party, the house was a total/complete shambles.
  • Fans are used to Young's laid-back stage presence, the hunched shoulders, eyes often masked by cap or hat, the trademark shamble and lurch.
  • In the defense of droopy faced Christine, her life is in shambles from the start. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • The State budgets are in shambles and taxes and fees are going though the roof, the federal debt is at a record of near 13 trillion dollars. CNN Poll: Optimism on economy fading
  • The Portland Race is caused by the meeting of the tides between the Bill and the Shambles sandbank about 3 miles SE.
  • Nearly two decades after the fall of Duvalier fils, Haiti's social and economic fabric lies in utter shambles.
  • Dressed in rags, with haggard faces, Maddock watched them shamble by.
  • The hungry marchers shambled slowly along .
  • The railways are a shambles - Railtrack's stock was declared near worthless in the City this week.
  • The whole thing has been a complete shambles. The Sun
  • The fiery, mustachioed leftist ruled through a junta, then was elected in 1984 but was defeated after a term characterized by authoritarian policies and an economy in shambles. SFGate: Don Asmussen: Bad Reporter
  • Here are a few more for your brain to chew on, so shamble on over to your reading glasses, moan slightly, drool and then put them on and get ready to have your stereotypical costume that you were killed in get blown completely off!
  • The wild hysteria of the mob rocketed from wall to wall of Lakkdarol's narrow streets and the storming of heavy boots over the slag-red pavement made an ominous undernote to that swelling bay, Shambleau! REVIEW: The World Turned Upside Down edited by David Drake, Eric Flint and Jim Baen
  • It makes me angry that I even care, considering that nothing much is going to change in my life after this election, and that our election result was just as big a shambles.
  • I have done mucho housework - including attacking my shambled (previously spotless) kitchen back to a state of almost spotlessness. July 15th, 2006
  • The GOP is in shambles, I LOVE IT! annie against biased news Armey warns against third party politics
  • ‘The delivery model for service on this airline could easily be workshopped into a far more efficient, customer-oriented system than the shambles in front of us today,’ the man on my right burbled.
  • How long till this turns into an omnishambles - tomorow?
  • He will illude to such things again, knowing the economy is in a shambles. Forbes.com: News
  • The revolutionist is no starved and diseased slave in the shambles at the bottom of the social pit, but is, in the main, a hearty, well - fed workingman, who sees the shambles waiting for him and his children and recoils from the descent. Revolution
  • Most measures in the 2012 budget generated a row, earning it the nickname 'omnishambles'. Times, Sunday Times
  • Labour have, in the lingo of the The Thick of It, a major omnishambles on their hands. The Coffee House | Politics and News Discussion Forum
  • The ship's interior was an utter shambles.
  • He was not very successful in his attempts, for the finances of the Empire were in a shambles and would take time to recover.
  • What few telecom stocks Peter had owned had gone south long ago, leaving his retirement scheme in a shambles. DEAD LINES
  • Far from being the transport revolution expected, the service was denounced as a shambles, a farce and the last resort.
  • Now the U.S. telecommunications industry lies in a shambles, and it has the potential to damage the entire economy.
  • The word 'omnishambles' is now back on everyone's lips. Times, Sunday Times
  • He picked up the pace into a ragged shamble, his knee throbbing with pain. CORMORANT
  • The business focus was too narrow, customers were not sufficiently valued, and the work culture was in a shambles.
  • My house is in an absolute shambles.
  • There would be whole rows of butchers, fishmongers and greengrocers, which were known as shambles.
  • Adjacent land was added to the market in the 1360s to bring butchers' stalls together into one spot as a shambles.
  • The ship's interior was an utter shambles. Titanic - Destination disaster
  • Critics have labelled the government's handling of the project an 'omnishambles'. Times, Sunday Times
  • The tunes still shamble and the lyrics still ramble.
  • She's so tired that she shambled into her bedroom.
  • Just as Gordon Brown’s unpopularity cannot be ascribed solely to the economy, so the public’s contempt for the Westminster omnishambles extends beyond expenses. Gordon Brown, Charlie Whelan and Me
  • It's hard to tell with this omnishambles government if the dog is wagging the tail or the tail wagging the dog.
  • The scheduling of this week's ties is a complete shambles. The Sun
  • The low point was 2012 and the 'omnishambles' budget, and there were others. Times, Sunday Times
  • The California energy disaster has left the once-vigorous electricity deregulation process in shambles.
  • I'll be sacked if I try to wriggle out of it," he'd lied and lied, with the cord of the phone around his neck, and across the shambled room Julia engulfed in his dressing gown, aquamarine eyes brimful. Polly Samson | The Man Who Fell
  • A woman shouted in Spanish in the hallway, cursing a man's retreating shamble. THE LAST RAVEN
  • He found his colony in a shambles, most of its inhabitants gone.
  • It was a complete shambles before, to be honest. Times, Sunday Times

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy