panto|pantos in English

noun

(British) pantomime

Use "panto|pantos" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "panto|pantos" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "panto|pantos", or refer to the context using the word "panto|pantos" in the English Dictionary.

1. There is no joviality to the Premiership panto season.

2. Check the Cultch's website to see what's on there; look out for the annual East Van Panto, a rip-roaring Christmas show that sells out every year.

3. And the "oh" with which he precedes the imagined rejoinder, incidentally, is classically British: the joke doesn't work in a country without a tradition of panto.

4. Hotels With the panto season now closed it is Baron Hardup who characterises a sport where prize-money coffers have been getting Barer and Barer of late thanks to a significant fall in levy income from

5. Benevolist - DICK TURPIN 11 letter words CLAUDE DUVAL - JEAN VALJEAN 12 letter words HUMANITARIAN - JACK SHEPPARD - JONATHAN WILD - POWER FOR GOOD - SOCIAL WORKER - WILLIE SUTTON 13 letter words JOHN DILLINGER - WELFARE WORKER 14 letter words JIMMY VALENTINE - PANTO CHARACTER - PHILANTHROPIST - THIEF OF BAGHDAD - WELFARE …

6. ‘Sirius is the new Baddie in this film, and having engineered the death of Harry's parents, he now wants to finish off their son.’ ‘Bobby is known for his role as the baddy in the panto but this year he has had to take a lesser role, due to his commitment as the show's director.’

7. The depth-related specifiers are of special importance, although their use is optional: Epi-: only between ≥0 and ≤50 cm, Endo-: only below ≥50 cm, Amphi-: starting between >0 and <50 and ending between >50 and <100 cm, Ano-: starting at 0 and ending between >50 and <100 cm, Kato-: starting between >0 and < 50 and ending at ≥100 cm, Panto-: from 0 to ≥100 cm.