(n.) A goblin; a specter; a frightful phantom; a bogy; a bugbear.
Example Sentences:
(1) In 1998 she moved to New York, where she still lives, to launch the US office of the British advertising agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty.
(2) The church's complicated law-making procedures could still mean the compromise measure – which was proposed in a late motion tabled on Monday by the previous moderator, Albert Bogle, may not be law until 2015.
(3) Mr Bogle said: "Most associations are now highly efficient in management, maintenance and procurement and will struggle to extract anything other than fairly minimal savings.
(4) Gordon also lashed out at Roberts’ direct criticism of Cindy Gallop, the former president of global ad agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty.
(5) David Bogle, chief executive of Hightown Praetorian HA , argues that social landlords could make considerable savings if more of their bank borrowings were at floating rates of interest.
(6) There will be no discussion today of her love life, of either (reported) ex-boyfriend Gael Garcia Bernal or current beau, Reading-born model turned fashion entrepreneur Nathan Bogle.
(7) And rude-sounding phrases abounded: "There'll be finger bogling and massed goat pandering at the Royal Nobblers Institute all next week"; "An exhibition of gnome clenching in the corset department of Sparkslaw and Towser".
(8) Bogling, pogoing, doing the funky chicken – a sudden infusion of sweaty musical joy that radiates through the stiff London crowd and gives you the same sick, heady feeling you got the very first time you saw Janelle Monáe: that this is what rock'n'roll is about, and it's so brilliant that we might as well all pack up and go home.
(9) The TV commercial, developed by ad agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH), marks the start of an advertising campaign that will also include outdoor advertising, cinema, press, and YouTube.
(10) Agency: Bartle Bogle Hegarty Director: Jonathan Glazer Guinness - "Out of the Depths" (Starts at 01:10) – UK Speaking of Jonathan Glazer, a new commercial for Guinness brings to mind his most famous commercial – the Surfer ad filmed in Hawaii.
(11) John Hegarty is Worldwide Creative Director of Bartle Bogle Hegarty and the author of Hegarty on Advertising: Turning Intelligence into Magic Not To Be Sold Separately: The Observer Colour Magazine 1964-1995 .
(12) I think she’s making up a lot of the stuff to create a profile, and to take applause, and to get on a soap[box].” Gallop, the former president of global ad agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH), welcomed Roberts’ departure on Wednesday but said Saatchi & Saatchi should have sacked him.
(13) Gallop, former president of the global agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH) in New York and once one of the most senior women in advertising, now adds unconscious bias to the list of barriers she goes through when she gives talks on the ad industry’s gender gap.
(14) Curriculum vitae Age 56 Education Wadhurst College, Kent; Oxford University Career 1981 theatre promoter 1985 account executive, Ted Bates 1987 account manager, JWT; account director, Gold Greenlees Trott 1989 board account director, Bartle Bogle Hegarty 1996 deputy MD, BBH AsiaPacific 1998 president BBH New York 2006 launches consultancy 2009 CEO IfWeRanTheWorld and founds MakeLoveNotPorn
Bogus
Definition:
(a.) Spurious; fictitious; sham; -- a cant term originally applied to counterfeit coin, and hence denoting anything counterfeit.
(n.) A liquor made of rum and molasses.
Example Sentences:
(1) Bill Shorten has told the union royal commission he would “never be a party to issuing bogus invoices” as he rejected assertions that payments from employers to the Australia Workers’ Union created conflicts of interest during wage negotiations.
(2) Specifically, 24 high-self-disclosing subjects and 24 low-self-disclosing subjects were presented with four bogus inventories manipulated on the variables of agreement in content and amount of disclosure.
(3) Some couriers, too, are fighting back, staging public protests and preparing legal challenges in employment tribunals over whether their self-employed status – which denies them the right to the minimum wage and holiday pay – is, in fact, bogus.
(4) The report of the inquiry, which helped bring down the Irish government of the day, found fraud and serious illegality in Goodman's companies in the 1980s that had involved not just the faking of documents, but also the commissioning of bogus official stamps, including those of other countries, to misclassify carcasses; passing off of inferior beef trimmings as higher-grade meat; cheating of customs officers; and institutionalised tax evasion.
(5) Subjects were asked to indicate their attitudes toward various nations after having received various bogus information about how they responded physiologically to the stimuli.
(6) The rush to make a new offer on devolution, promised within hours of publication of the shock poll result on Sunday, triggered accusations of panic and bogus bribes.
(7) For example, a bogus branded customer care account may direct fans to a bogus web site to reset their password as part of a system upgrade.
(8) Angela Merkel stands firm on finding resolution to Greece crisis Read more But this is bogus.
(9) Instead of investing client's money in secrities, it was held with a bank and new deposits used to pay bogus returns to give the impression that the business was successful.
(10) Big names frighten them on their doorsteps, oozing bogus bonhomie.
(11) The argument that it is might be comfortable and familiar, but it is bogus and ill-informed.
(12) ‘Patriotism’ is a difficult concept to pin, and one man’s patriotism can easily be misjudged as folly or even treachery if we start judging based on a narrow understanding of the term.” Walid, a Muslim veteran of the navy, added that “even though we invaded Iraq based upon bogus information, that doesn’t diminish the sacrifice of Captain Khan and other American service members who lost their lives”.
(13) And there's the fact that Romney's whole "binder full of women" anecdote was completely bogus: he commissioned no such binder; it was provided to him by a bipartisan coalition of women's groups, which had created it prior to his election.
(14) "The whole charge is transparently bogus and meant for the media to reduce turnout to the march on Sunday."
(15) I would never be party to issuing any bogus invoices, full stop,” Shorten said in response to questions about $300,000 in payments from Thiess John Holland to the AWU’s Victorian branch and national office between 2005 and 2008.
(16) Reports of decomposing bodies littering the streets of Damasak came as the president elect, Muhammadu Buhari, denounced the Islamists as a bogus religious group and vowed a hard line against them when he comes to power at the end of next month.
(17) Pregnant women (N = 220) attending urban maternity care clinics were randomly assigned to study groups to determine the effectiveness of a "bogus pipeline" method to increase the accuracy of behavioral self-reports of alcohol consumption.
(18) Massimo Cellino’s reign as Leeds United owner is under serious threat after an Italian judge ruled he set up a “bogus corporate screen” as part of a “Machiavellian simulation” deliberately to evade paying import tax on a yacht in 2012, meaning the Football League could bar the Italian from controlling the club.
(19) Allies of President Barack Obama on Sunday sharply criticised the latest Republican inquiry into his response to the deadly 2012 attack on the US diplomatic mission in Benghazi, describing it as a “bogus” scheme to score political points that was fuelled by conservative media.
(20) So that entire analysis is bogus and is wrong, but gets frequently peddled around here by folks who oftentimes are trying to defend previous policies that they themselves made.” Obama is scheduled to return from his vacation temporarily next Sunday.