(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
Bugle
Definition:
(n.) A sort of wild ox; a buffalo.
(n.) A horn used by hunters.
(n.) A copper instrument of the horn quality of tone, shorter and more conical that the trumpet, sometimes keyed; formerly much used in military bands, very rarely in the orchestra; now superseded by the cornet; -- called also the Kent bugle.
(n.) An elongated glass bead, of various colors, though commonly black.
(a.) Jet black.
(n.) A plant of the genus Ajuga of the Mint family, a native of the Old World.
Example Sentences:
(1) Every morning, we were were woken by a bugle and hurriedly changed into our gym attire for the exercise session '.
(2) He took his cameras to a school run by Save the Children in Kenya, for homeless boys from Nairobi, for instance, that was set up along the lines of a British public school; the children are shown blowing bugles, marching, reading books including The Inimitable Jeeves and Tom Brown's Schooldays.
(3) Lateral thinking was needed to decipher old signs: Adam and Eve meant a fruiterer; a bugle’s horn, a post office; a unicorn, an apothecary’s; a spotted cat, a perfumer’s (since civet, a fashionable musky perfume, was scraped from the anal glands of African civet cats).
(4) Complaints to Ryanair were down 40% to 80,000 letters a year, O’Leary said, adding that many of those were about the landing bugle, played to herald an on-time arrival, the theme tune of which was recently modified to “some Spanish dribble”.
(5) The supporters' band emerged from the terraces at Hillsborough, Sheffield Wednesday's ground, when – following Hemmingham's decision to smuggle a bugle into the ground in 1993, which met with a favourable response – then manager Trevor Francis asked him to form a club band.
(6) In the mating season, mid-September to mid-October, the sound of bull elk bugling fills the air.
(7) Three hundred and ninety-nine infantry, little toy men, ran about when the bugle sounded, and formed up in stiff lines below the black building till there was no more bugling: then they scattered, and after a few minutes the smoke of cooking fires went up.
(8) They created an underground satirical newspaper, the Bletchley Bugle, with headlines such as "Nasa photo of Earth’s most inhospitable place is Bletchley Park Management Offices" and "Park to replace staff with docile clones".
(9) A full-length black gown with long sleeves and a bugle-beaded shoulder detail was surely a sartorial shout out to Jolie come Oscar night.
(10) Suddenly there was a roar that became a bugle call for the charge.
(11) "Win, lose or draw, Italy will still need a result against Uruguay to advance," bugles Mark Weiner.
(12) "If I were supreme leader, I'd simply keep those awkward foreigner teams out of my World Championships," bugles Justin Kavanagh.
(13) A bugle call is the signal for a Korean marching band to strike up, trumpeting the arrival of the country’s futuristic white space-blob, just as an Argentinian drumming troop thunders into action next door.
(14) The English have no need to beat the drum or blow the bugle.
(15) Entrapped between the bubbles is a horn- or bugle-shaped fluid collection that we theorize emits a continuous sound wave back to the transducer when struck by an ultrasound pulse.
(16) Many of the C-17 cargo planes were towed into position because they can no longer fly, fuelling accusations that the ceremonies, which include bugles and bagpipes, were misleading theatre.
(17) The Bugle is available for free at soundcloud.com and iTunes .
(18) In the stones, and statues, and archives, and exhibitions, and, on Remembrance Day, in the notes of bugles calling from sad shires.
(19) Moving to New York forced him to cancel an Edinburgh run with another good friend, the comedian Andy Zaltzman , but the two now co-present a weekly podcast, The Bugle , which they record down the line, Oliver in New York and Zaltzman in Britain.