Sentences with club
club
C c - ...the Chorlton Conservative Club.
- I stopped in at the club for a drink.
- This year, perennial battlers Southern Districts have won a barnstorming eight from eight games in the club's best start to a season.
- Before yesterday's charming scenes at Arthur Ashe Stadium, this exclusive mothers' club had just two members, both of them Australian.
- ...the New York Yankees baseball club.
- It's a big dance hit in the clubs.
- There is no better way to promote your health club than to show off your most successful members.
- But things have changed at the club and things are now moving in the right direction.
- ...a six-iron club.
- Men armed with knives and clubs attacked his home.
- Two thugs clubbed him with baseball bats. [VERB noun]
- ...the ace of clubs.
- The next player discarded a club.
- A wine club
- clubhouse
- A book club; a record club; a Christmas club.
- Last night we went to all the clubs in town.
- Clubs is trump. Clubs are trump.
- They clubbed their dollars together to buy the expensive present.
- There were many wooden chairs for the bulk of his visitors, and two wicker armchairs with red cloth cushions for superior people. From the packing-cases had emerged some Indian clubs, [ …] , and all these articles [ …] made a scattered and untidy decoration that Mrs. Clough assiduously dusted and greatly cherished.
- He can have no right to the benefits of Society, who will not pay his Club towards the Support of it.
- The students at that university go clubbing every Friday night.
- She was sitting in a jazz club, sipping wine and listening to a bass player's solo.
- I've got only one club in my hand.
- You also hate Night Court? Join the club. Michael stood you up? Welcome to the club.
- He clubbed the poor dog.
- A medical condition with clubbing of the fingers and toes
- We went clubbing in Ibiza.
- They allow no substitutions on the club luncheon.
- To club the expense
- To club a battalion implies a temporary inability in the commanding officer to restore any given body of men to their natural front in line or column.
- They organized a computer club.