เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

clubbable การใช้

"clubbable" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • A clubbable man, he enjoyed " the companionship of clever and attractive women " even more.
  • But his unwillingness to make compromises with the establishmentarian consensus never enabled him to fit into the clubbable world of British politics.
  • He was by nature ambitious,'clubbable'sociable, and frequently seen at High Society parties in the fashionable houses of the Edwardian era.
  • Never lacking for self-esteem, he is, as Thomas suggests, one of the least " clubbable " guys of modern times.
  • The social diarist Maria Edgeworth, often alluded to by Jane Austen wrote that he was an " old school dog " and certainly Bathurst was clubbable.
  • Scott was intensely clubbable : gregarious and abounding in bonhomie, he frequently met at the Reform Club and with his left-wing friends at the Bath Club.
  • There isn't anybody who wants to be the director of a major company who would associate with Carl, because that would make him not clubbable ."
  • "A Clubbable Woman " passes muster as the latest British TV detective series to land stateside ( 9 p . m . Tuesday, A & E ).
  • Clubbable, charming and feckless, he was always to be found holding court at the end of the bar in the George, never taking seriously the dangerous form of diabetes that was ultimately to end his life.
  • Bowden expressed the view that while Crawford " had a quick temper, which he strove to control . . . he was essentially a friendly man ", adding that he could be " clubbable, hospitable and kind ".
  • In " A Clubbable Woman, " the first of three installments of a series based on Reginald Hill's Dalziel / Pascoe mystery novels, Oscar Madison and Felix Unger are more or less reincarnated with Welsh accents.
  • The television series, co-produced ( on a seemingly spare budget ) by A & E and the BBC, begins at the beginning with " A Clubbable Woman, " the story that introduced the odd couple in 1970.
  • In " A Clubbable Woman, " the action revolves around the Wetherton Rugby Football Club, where various pillars of the community can regurgitate the fleeting moments of glory they may have had in the good old days . Dalziel himself is a member.
  • In what may be the most disgruntling proposal for members of a particularly clubbable set of Britons _ the members of the House of Commons and the House of Lords _ he said, " Parliament should set an example and become smoke free ."
  • What elevates " A Clubbable Woman " slightly routine whodunit is the recognition of how women are clearly seen as appendages to their husbands; even the murder victim is demonized in death as a vindictive, scheming woman intent on sabotaging the boys'extramarital fun.
  • How did this least clubbable of men navigate the dense thicket of protocol and backslapping that is life in the House ( the world's largest Rotary meeting ) and the Senate ( the self-styled " world's most exclusive club " )?
  • Describing him as " Britain's most controversial television director " and " a pretty much unique figure in contemporary television who has devoted his career to giving the powerful sleepless nights ", Rees quotes Kosminsky as saying " I'd be nervous if I were clubbable.
  • Like its British gumshoe peers, " A Clubbable Women " hooks us with a mystery that, twists aside, exposes British society's more disturbing givens : in this case, sexism in the hail-fellow-well-met world of British weekend rugby.
  • The Club website states that " " Candidates have to be clubbable " " ( i . e . " clubbable " in the sense of a traditional gentlemen's club ) and " " the Hawks'Club remains unashamedly elite " ", claiming to include only " " the top one per cent " " of University sportsmen.
  • The Club website states that " " Candidates have to be clubbable " " ( i . e . " clubbable " in the sense of a traditional gentlemen's club ) and " " the Hawks'Club remains unashamedly elite " ", claiming to include only " " the top one per cent " " of University sportsmen.