(a.) Handsome; beautiful; pretty; attractively lively and graceful.
(a.) Gay; merry; frolicsome; cheerful; blithe.
(n.) A round and compact bed of ore, or a distinct bed, not communicating with a vein.
Example Sentences:
(1) Blake, 80, the star of In Cold Blood and the Baretta TV series, was accused of involvement in the death of his wife Bonnie Lee Bakley, who was shot outside a Los Angeles restaurant in May 2001.
(2) Later that day, Collins, Perkins and Jones were observed meeting again at the Castle pub, moving on to the upmarket Bonnie Gull Seafood Bar in nearby Exmouth Market.
(3) Her real passion has always been 1970s character films: Badlands, Midnight Cowboy and Bonnie And Clyde.
(4) Her first appearance in the New Yorker, in 1967, was a 6,000-word essay eulogising Bonnie And Clyde as "the most excitingly American movie since The Manchurian Candidate".
(5) It sends a signal to Xi Jinping that this is a president that means business Bonnie Glaser, foreign policy expert “The fact that he did this while Xi Jinping is in Mar-a-Lago is quite telling.
(6) I take you very, very seriously.” Pretzell and Petry are like Bonnie and Clyde, pursuing a course of ambush through the German public Jakob Augstein, Der Spiegel Not for a long time has so much been written and said about a single German politician (other than Merkel).
(7) An inquest into Bonnie's death has not yet taken place.
(8) A few yards from the Munich clock, the memorial to the victims of the 1958 air disaster, Ian McGill, 58, a haulage contractor from Bristol, was explaining its significance to his grand-daughters, Bonnie, eight, and Milly, seven.
(9) Measham's drug research was already in the pipeline when Bonnie died.
(10) The lovey-dovey duo – glimmers of spontaneous affection, particularly those initiated by Jay Z, sent the crowd into a frenzy – began with Bonnie & Clyde, with Beyonce seductively walking into view to reveal a fishnet leotard and matching ski mask.
(11) The actions of the police are showing the public what a tyrannical government looks like,” said Bonnie Leung, 27.
(12) When Don Was (Grammy-winning producer of the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt and many more) took over as president of the record label Blue Note earlier this year, one of his first decisions was to sign the 67-year old singer.
(13) For the media, it was Bonnie and Clyde and Clyde – offering the salacious possibility of a murderous menage a trois Rather than investigating how far-right killers could have operated undetected for so long, most of the German media opted for lurid coverage of the NSU, insisting that it consisted of only three people.
(14) To this end he has, from the start, cloaked himself in personae, releasing his records via a small British independent label, Domino, under a series of tangentially related pseudonyms: Palace, Palace Music, Palace Songs and, latterly, Bonnie Prince Billy - 'It's got the Wild West, the Billy the Kid thing and the Celtic thing.'
(15) Bonnie Glaser, the director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) thinktank in Washington, said a ruling that questioned or rejected China’s “nine-dash line” would not invalidate all of Beijing’s claims to land or maritime zones in the South China Sea.
(16) They are entirely without merit and are a classic example of studio 'bullying tactics,'" said lawyer Bonnie Eskenazi, in a statement.
(17) It makes sense to work with a UK law firm,” said Amasenibo Abere, a Bonny island community leader whose fishing grounds were devastated in late November 2014 when a Shell pipeline was damaged, spilling thousands of barrels of oil into creeks and swamps .
(18) I suppose my time there will pass quickly in a series of short, varied, representative scenes with Bonnie Tyler’s Holding Out for a Hero playing in the background!” This was met in a silence chilled with liquid nitrogen.
(19) THE KALANICK FILE Born Travis Kalanick, 6 August 1976, in Los Angeles to Donald, an engineer, and Bonnie, who worked in advertising for the Los Angeles Daily News .
(20) Dawn McCarthy And Bonny "Prince" Billy Christmas Eve Can Kill You (Domino, 2012) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reading this on mobile?
Bunny
Definition:
(n.) A great collection of ore without any vein coming into it or going out from it.
(n.) A pet name for a rabbit or a squirrel.
Example Sentences:
(1) "They're still so little," they chirped, as piggy, bunny and Li Li lined up to start reception.
(2) Playboy's globally recognisable "bunny ears" image remains untarnished by economic factors, but its business has faltered amid a rise in free adult entertainment online.
(3) It was a world in which members called black women "chocolate bunnies", female employees were barred from dating customers (but encouraged to go out with Playboy executives) and behaviour was highly circumscribed.
(4) Television's natural instinct was now simply to go on and on, to consume the infinite time stretching out in front of it, like those cartoons where Bugs Bunny is frantically laying down railway track so the train he is on can keep moving.
(5) I should cocoa: Hotel Chocolat boss aims for more bounce than an Easter bunny Read more Of the £55.5m raised from the share placing, £12m will be used to speed up expansion plans, which include opening new shops and improving its website.
(6) Many local anti-Ukip protests are galvanised by a tiny, loud woman who goes by the soubriquet Bunny La Roche and who last December lambasted Farage from the audience on Question Time , her blue hair and cries of “racist scumbag” making a lasting impression.
(7) Going to the gym "Gym bunnies" are becoming complacent of late, and giving themselves snack-based "treats" as rewards for half an hour on the treadmill.
(8) "I'm still getting royalties as if it were full price … so I'm a really happy bunny," said James.
(9) I tried to address it and have a bit of bunny-based banter with him: "Why are you wearing a full rabbit costume?"
(10) We're looking at other ways to cut upfront costs & raise standards September 19, 2016 Gym bunnies If your gym membership is through your job, that is.
(11) I'll see an average of eight people a day, versus seeing 800 [in New York] – they're replaced by the bunny rabbits that come in my yard and eat clovers, there's deer that walk across my backyard, there's black bears in the neighbourhood, wild turkeys everywhere in the street.
(12) None of that matters though after they have finished "A Bunny's Tale."
(13) A minister in the department explains: “The big question for us was: is the answer more eggs and bunnies, or do we need to get away from that and back to the brilliant original story or myth – can we check which it is please, Anthea?
(14) Her feature film debut was auspicious and striking – she played the sassy buddy of Jonah Hill in Superbad – and rapidly followed it with roles in The Rocker and The House Bunny .
(15) She makes French women look like bunny-boilers sans lapin .
(16) He was a homicidal Energiser Bunny,” said Swingle.
(17) But this will not be a Watership Down speech, with a bunny produced on every page.
(18) By 1960 Playboy was reaching a million readers a month, and in 1963, when "A Bunny's Tale" was published, the Playboy Clubs were flourishing.
(19) Peter Tosh Founded the Wailers with Marley and Bunny Wailer in 1962, but fell out and left embittered in 1974.
(20) (When they first meet her in 1995, Rust cracks a cruel joke when Marty gives her money to leave a bunny ranch: “Is that a down payment?”) Remember that prisoner who told Rust about the “Yellow King” and then killed himself?