How To Use Walloper In A Sentence

  • But it is questionable if many people know very much about him after all, or if the Fielding of legend -- the potwalloper of genius at whom we have smiled so often -- has many things in common with the Fielding of fact, the indefatigable student, the vigorous magistrate, the great and serious artist. Views and Reviews Essays in appreciation
  • He's a good Catholic and a walloper who once fought off an armed man with a loaded Toyota troop-carrier.
  • RUMMY [stealing across to Bill and addressing him in a subdued voice, but with intense conviction] I'd av the lor of you, you flat eared pignosed potwalloper, if she'd let me. Major Barbara
  • Essentially, one 325-pound dockwalloper had replaced another 325-pound dockwalloper. NYT > Home Page
  • Although many books and anecdotes I’ve read detailed similar practices - rough someone up, then charge them to cover your own ass - by the wallopers in Qld way back. Cheeseburger Gothic » I dont normally interrupt traffic to the Geek on the weekend, but this is important.
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  • Franz-Josef glowered at the doctor and said it would be unwise to move me, surely, and the poultice-walloper agreed that it would be nothing short of bloody reckless. Watershed
  • Every clodhopper an 'cow-walloper these days is an able seaman. CHAPTER II
  • After reading this report, it seems the younger generation now has a better way to foil the wallopers ' close attentions.
  • In some places (the so-called "scot and lot" boroughs) the suffrage was exercised by all rate-payers; in others, by the holders of particular tenements ( "burgage" franchise); in others (the "potwalloper" (p.  024) boroughs) by all citizens who had hearths of their own; in many, by the municipal corporation, or by the members of a guild, or even by neighboring landholders. The Governments of Europe
  • The conductor blinked uncertainly; J.B. tended to have that effect on folk, and the four of us were sufficiently large and ugly to daunt the stoutest ticket-walloper. THE NUMBERS
  • After popping the wrong man, Britain's wallopers will be just that extra bit more cautious before hauling out the shooting irons.
  • Last week in Yarraville, he became the fourth person to be pulled over at random and forced to surrender a saliva sample to the wallopers.
  • There was an embarrassed staff-walloper on the platform at Chicago to convoy our hero to General Sheridan forth-with, and from little Phil we learned that Sherman had sent word that the Sioux expedition was definitely to proceed without Custer. Isabelle
  • He soon found work as a "pot walloper," or dishwasher, at a restaurant on the Hudson River piers in New York. Fast Food That Won the West
  • It belongs to this freeman, to that potwalloper, to the owner of this house, to the owner of that old wall; and you have no more right to take it away without compensation than to confiscate the dividends of a fundholder or the rents of a landholder. Miscellaneous Writings and Speeches — Volume 4
  • In some places (the so-called "scot and lot" boroughs) the suffrage was exercised by all rate-payers; in others, by the holders of particular tenements ( "burgage" franchise); in others (the "potwalloper" (p.  024) boroughs) by all citizens who had hearths of their own; in many, by the municipal corporation, or by the members of a guild, or even by neighboring landholders. The Governments of Europe
  • a pot-walloper by capacity, he was a loose-jointed, sniffling creature, heartless and selfish and cowardly, without a soul, in fear of his life of Dan Make Westing
  • There were "scot and lot" boroughs, "potwalloper" boroughs, burgage boroughs, corporation or "close" boroughs, and "freemen" boroughs, to mention only the more important of the types that (p.  080) can be distinguished. [ The Governments of Europe
  • So when the poultice-walloper shook his head over Oliver, and glanced towards me, lying there all blood-spattered and pathetic, I was ready with a feeble gesture to keep him at a distance - the last thing I wanted was the little bugger poking at me and exclaiming: THE NUMBERS
  • In earlier posts about the sad state of policing in Victoria, the Professor may have been just a bit too harsh about the wallopers.
  • While becoming established as a longshoreman, or “dockwalloper,” as they have been dubbed on the Great Lakes, Danny busied himself reading in his spare time. Kill the Irishman
  • Perfectly calmly, reasonably, and without visible emotion, they were rehearsing a formula which even I, ignorant staff-walloper that I was, could see was one for disaster. The Sky Writer

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