What's the difference between clubable and clubbable?

Clubable


Definition:

Example Sentences:

Clubbable


Definition:

  • (a.) Suitable for membership in a club; sociable.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Is he clubbable with guests Tom Hanks and Mila Kunis?
  • (2) Men have been doing this for each other since time began – the clubbable aspect of the old boys' network.
  • (3) Unlike Phillips, whose shyness sometimes makes him appear remote, Neuberger is a clubbable, affable man who hides a razor-sharp intellect behind an easy-going manner.
  • (4) After all, Young continues, the leading Conservative has been criticised by parliamentary colleagues in the past for not being sufficiently clubbable.
  • (5) David Cameron is a first-class leader of the party and a first-class prime minister and I hope he’s going to be doing that for a very long time.” However, she was also clear that whatever she decided to do, May would not make herself any more “clubbable” nor join the old boys’ network to get there.
  • (6) She is admired in her party for being smart, sensible and no-nonsense, and any suggestion that she isn't "clubbable" can be attributed to the underlying sexism of a place where ministers who prefer putting the kids to bed rather than drinking with colleagues are deemed a bit odd.
  • (7) Reedie himself has come in for fierce criticism from some, seen as too clubbable and too conflicted given his companion role as an IOC vice-president.
  • (8) Not everybody gets invited on Desert Island Discs .” And when it comes to clubbability and hanging around in Westminster bars, she is forthright: “It is not me.” The first of her chosen eight discs is the Four Seasons’ hit Walk Like a Man, and yet, although May loves the song, she argues it is important to her that she is allowed to do her job as herself.
  • (9) Druidism can be seen as another quasi-Masonic phenomenon, and druids of this ilk are on a par with any other odd fellows, their aim being clubbable mutual assistance rather than mystical transcendence.
  • (10) Recent histories of the period have emphasised the intellectual liveliness and clubbable characters of the "English Enlightenment", but here there's a sense of Augustan severity.
  • (11) The story of how the Premier League came into being is one of determination and deceit, of clubbable bureaucracy coming face to face with free-wheeling entrepreneurialism.
  • (12) More clubbable – her karaoke number was Dolly Parton’s 9 to 5 – she has gained a reputation as a May loyalist who can be volatile with colleagues.
  • (13) In keeping with her apparent lack of clubbability, her supporters – "Mayniacs", some people call them – do not seem to form any clearly identifiable faction.
  • (14) It turns out that he is a shortish, respectably groomed figure, sporting a clubbable red and blue tie for his congressional appearance.
  • (15) Hemming, who was first elected as MP for Birmingham Yardley at the 2005 general election, is not a clubbable figure at Westminster.
  • (16) But he's a great guy, very clubbable and amiable, who can take a joke and keep things in perspective."
  • (17) When they made their debut in A Clubbable Woman in 1970, Dalziel and Pascoe were indeed an ambivalent pair, just as likely to bully and persecute a suspect as ride to the rescue of a victim.
  • (18) None of them are as obviously clubbable as Nige and he may want shot of them after the election.

Words possibly related to "clubable"

Words possibly related to "clubbable"