Use "cobbled" in a sentence

1. The cobbled streets were closed to cars.

2. The diplomats cobbled an agreement together.

3. The place is a cobbled triangle.

4. They walked together across a cobbled square.

5. Cottrell strode out across the cobbled courtyard.

6. She cobbled together an essay in half an hour.

7. The government seems to have cobbled together these proposals.

8. 29 The reforms have been very hastily cobbled together.

9. The reforms have been very hastily cobbled together.

10. 8 Cottrell strode out across the cobbled courtyard.

11. The window looked out on to the cobbled yard.

12. The essay was cobbled together from some old notes.

13. Lunch could be had in the inn's cobbled courtyard.

14. The cobbled yard outside the stables which were built in 15

15. The student cobbled together an essay in half an hour.

16. They walked through the arch and into the cobbled courtyard.

17. The group had cobbled together a few decent songs.

18. A long cobbled street bisects the town from east to west.

19. Its five boroughs were first cobbled into one municipality in 18

20. In some instances, I believe, spurious cases were cobbled together for propaganda purposes.

21. She cobbled together a tent from a few pieces of string and a sheet.

22. Small, landlocked Austria offers alpine scenery, world-class museums, cobbled quaintness, and Wiener schnitzel

23. Angela actually found herself holding her nose as she walked through the cobbled streets.

24. He cobbled together a brunch of cold remains from the fridge, with lemon tea.

25. She followed Will along the mean cobbled streets until he paused alongside a narrow alley.

26. Beaune is a stunning, walled city known for its cobbled streets, battlements, ramparts and extensive old town

27. Cobbled streets weave past baroque palaces, lively beer halls, glowering castles, and light - infused cathedrals.

28. Cyphers are one-use, cobbled together bits of technology that characters frequently discover and use.

29. Carol looked up at the weathercock as the car drew up at her house in the cobbled square.

30. Amazing hotel fully in the style of old Seville; cool patios, scented orange trees and cobbled alleyways.

31. The cobbled beaches swarmed with seals, and there was, as well, a fine colony of otters.

32. By comparison with the cold cobbled alleys, the hotel restaurant was a scene of throbbing gaiety.

33. For a modern, purpose-built resort it is surprisingly attractive, with its wood-clad buildings and cobbled shopping precincts.

34. The authorities have been grappling with the problem for a decade, but still the cars choke the cobbled streets.

35. 28 Nearby Newark is a picturesque market town with a cobbled square overlooked by buildings of architectural interest.

36. To his left was a long, shadowy, cobbled passage running beside what looked like barred loose boxes.

37. To utter rapidly and indistinctly: "Toward the end he Babbled old stories, randomly cobbled together" (Julia Whitty)

38. To utter rapidly and indistinctly: "Toward the end he Babbled old stories, randomly cobbled together" (Julia Whitty)

39. Slide through an alleyway that seems to have history inscribed on its cobbled stones and we've reached the first stop.

40. With its narrow cobbled streets and gabled houses, Brugge must be one of the most beautiful cities in Europe.

41. 27 Le Palais, where the ferry docks, is an agreeable, unspoilt little town of ancient houses and cobbled squares.

42. Claudia had just time to see a sign in gold and red before they turned into a cobbled yard.

43. 20 Somehow a collection for the next few months was cobbled together and gobbled up by the hungry customers.

44. TrAddles is a comfortable 2 bedroom apartment, situated in the heart of old St.ives on the beautiful cobbled back lanes.

45. He hunched his shoulders and stamped his way defiantly down the rest of the stairs and out into the cobbled street.

46. About Cadiz The past runs deep in Cadiz, where cobbled medieval streets spill out into whitewashed Spanish plazas and Roman ruins

47. Stein-am-Rhein Cars are banned from its cobbled streets, which are flanked by a positively intoxicating profusion of old buildings.

48. Antwerp, with its frustrating fragmentation and hallucinations, never manages fully to dislodge the impression that it is a cobbled assemblage of pages

49. Cobbled together from 26 provisional decrees and executive orders, the economic-recovery programme is an ambitious inventory of investment and austerity.

50. The timeless, hand-cobbled appearance of Bergerac® recalls an era when horse-drawn carriages traversed the avenues of Europe's great cities

51. He has total control over the broadcasting media and the government that he laboriously cobbled together over an eight-month period.

52. 20 There was no phone number listed for the old seminary that opened on to a cobbled courtyard above the Praia Grande.

53. It's easy to understand why Vincent Van Gogh was so charmed by Arles, with its sun-kissed stone houses, cobbled squares, and Roman ruins

54. To make or assemble roughly or hastily the stranded hikers cobbled together a rickety shelter for the night Synonyms for Cobbling (together or up)

55. SK: And an alderman by the name of Fred Steffan cobbled together parts of the submissions to make what is now the Milwaukee flag.

56. Cartagena's Old Town is a Unesco World Heritage Site – a maze of cobbled alleys, balconies covered in bougainvillea, and massive churches that cast their

57. Welcome to Colombia Soaring Andean summits, unspoiled Caribbean coast, enigmatic Amazon jungle, cryptic archaeological ruins and cobbled colonial communities. Colombia boasts all of South America's allure, and more.

58. Commonly known as Beefeaters, the elaborately uniformed Yeomen were introduced in 1485 by Henry VII to help guard the Tower – then a cobbled complex where not …

59. Passionate about authentic, handmade unusual jewellery, Cartwheels & Curtseys is the home of beautiful jewels sourced from the intriguing cobbled pathways of Paris, London and beyond.

60. But in five years, with coherent political leadership and a lot of luck, the institutional framework of a passably workable monetary union will have been cobbled together.

61. When I was a little girl I dreamed of living in a terraced house on a cobbled street, because in wagons and caravans you never get any peace.

62. 28 On the recce you really get to feel it: when you drive into a village on those little cobbled roads it's like a cowboy riding in on his horse.

63. Here you can wander the cobbled streets and take the opportunity to visit one of the famous producers whose wines have earned the ultimate accolade of Premier Grand Cru Classé.

64. The trio are set to rematch several times in the coming month at the Cobbled and Ardennes Classics, and it’s at the latter races where Hirschi plans on joining the list of favourites again.

65. In the Middle Ages, Canterbury’s pilgrimage-site status made it the setting of Chaucer’s seminal "Canterbury Tales," while today, cobbled streets and the 6th-century Canterbury Cathedral secure this city as one of England’s must-visit destinations.

66. Bisect From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Maths Bisect bi‧sect / baɪˈsekt $ ˈbaɪsekt / verb [ transitive ] HM TWO formal to divide something into two equal parts A long cobbled street Bisects the town from east to west

67. But this presentation from Half Assiduity Arts, a group with a shoestring budget and a wealth of optimism, is the kind of cobbled-together piece that the artists' parents might have created when they were young

68. Welcome to Antibes The ancient walled town of Antibes is one of the liveliest and prettiest on the Riviera with its relaxed beachy feel, thriving superyacht port and gorgeous old town of narrow cobbled streets, markets and cafes.

69. It looks much as it did in earlier times, so one can hardly walk around the grim, gray towers and cobbled streets without being reminded of the violence, suffering, and human tragedy experienced within the Tower’s walls over the centuries.

70. The Visitor Centre is next to the Pottery in a cobbled courtyard and is open daily with free centre entry. Matlock Bath is a wonderful historic village in the Derbyshire Peak District – a mecca for photographers – offering many attractions from museums to amusements!

71. About Beaune The winding country lanes and vine-covered hills that lead the way to Beaune offer a first look at the town’s storybook charms, and its medieval architecture, cobbled paths, and ancient wine cellars make it so this capital of the Burgundy wine region never disappoints

72. To most, the word architecture Connotes a grandeur typically associated with the Old World— flying buttresses, Doric columns, baroque flourishes, byzantine arabesques— and thus many of the more _____ structures, especially those not obviously inspired by neoclassicism, are often thought to be cobbled together haphazardly instead of following some prescribed architectural idiom.

73. Nothing knocked over or even Askew.: Rien de renversé ou même de travers.: Over a million copies sold, and your hat is Askew.: Plus d'un million d'exemplaires vendus, et votre calot est de travers.: Everything is Askew in this theatre sculpted from the ephemeral - a cobbled-together horse, a cardboard crown, sumptuous robes and tunics from an ageless epic.