(n.) A narrow dale; a small dell; a small, secluded, and embowered valley.
Example Sentences:
(1) There's a vintage woodburing stove, no TV, a seafood menu rich in local produce, including Glenbeigh oysters, and a top-notch brew on draught in Tom Crean's lager, the sole beer made by Dingle Brewing Company (dinglebrewingcompany.com).
(2) His friend Dingle Foot drafted an editorial that David then sharpened up, inserting phrases that summed up his outlook: 'We had not realised that our government was capable of such folly and crookedness...It is no longer possible to bomb countries because you fear that your trading interests will be harmed...this new feeling for the sanctity of human life is the best element in the modern world.'
(3) Our bookings were well up this year and I can tell you many new people who stayed with us said they wanted to go to the Skelligs after reading about Star Wars being filmed down here.” In the neighbouring peninsula of Dingle, the local tourist industry is still benefiting from the publicity surrounding David Lean’s epic 1970 romantic drama, Ryan’s Daughter, which was was shot in the area.
(4) At 568,969, the paper’s circulation had recently overtaken that of its old rival, the Sunday Times : it’s not true that it plummeted after Suez as a result of the outrage caused by Astor adding the line: “We had not realised that our government was capable of such folly and such crookedness” to Dingle Foot’s leader – but well-heeled middle-class readers who cancelled their subscriptions were replaced by relatively impoverished students and leftwing intellectuals.
(5) Whereupon Gore uttered the immortal phrase: "But what about the Dingle-Norwood bill?"
(6) On top of the whiskey, the Dingle Distillery is already producing its own branded vodka and gin.
(7) Inside the distillery, where casks include a special first edition set called Dingle Founding Fathers, yours for more than €6,000, Hughes says it's time for Irish independent distillers to challenge Scotland's hegemony.
(8) On 26 July 1994 the former detective chief superintendent Graham Melvin and the detective inspector Maxwell Dingle, were cleared at the Old Bailey of fabricating evidence in the Blakelock case.
(9) A high-heeled boot stepping out of a stolen red Ferrari into a muddy Emmerdale ditch means only one thing: Charity Dingle is back.
(10) "The investments going on in Dingle and in other distilleries like one aimed for Shane Castle are highly significant in terms of creating subsidiary jobs and the expenditure put into them.
(11) Nearby is the Sir Sandford Fleming park (also called the Dingle), an amazing place for families to have fun in its great playground.
(12) • Garrykennedy, Portroe, larkins.ie , Ruby Red Irish Ale €4.20 John Benny's, Dingle, Kerry John and Éilis Moriarty, owners of this seafront gem, are traditional musicians who can be relied on to begin the nightly live sessions – John on accordion and Éilis on flute.
(13) On a break from work at the Dingle Distillery, Hughes says he has noticed an improvement in footfall and consumer spending in his Porterhouse pubs in Ireland.
(14) Our results therefore essentially confirm the hypothesis of Dingle and Lucy of common mechanism of action of liposoluble vitamins on biological membranes.
(15) Allow four days – two either side for travel, and one each for exploring the Reeks and the nearby Dingle peninsula.
(16) Our results are in partial agreement with the Dingle and Lucy's hypothesis on the common action of liposoluble vitamines on the erythrocyte membrane.
(17) To Emmerdale , briefly, where events have taken a turn for the Dingle.
(18) I would put my penis in its burning exhaust' Gilgun as Eli Dingle in Emmerdale.
(19) Kenny will have to wait another three years to sample a drop of Dingle Distillery's brand.
Jingle
Definition:
(v. i.) To sound with a fine, sharp, rattling, clinking, or tinkling sound; as, sleigh bells jingle.
(v. i.) To rhyme or sound with a jingling effect.
(v. t.) To cause to give a sharp metallic sound as a little bell, or as coins shaken together; to tinkle.
(n.) A rattling, clinking, or tinkling sound, as of little bells or pieces of metal.
(n.) That which makes a jingling sound, as a rattle.
(n.) A correspondence of sound in rhymes, especially when the verse has little merit; hence, the verse itself.
Example Sentences:
(1) There isn't a huge amount of production going into this, but even so, there are jingles, and adverts alerting prisoners to support and rehab services.
(2) It can take all of a parent's ingenuity to get though a shopping trip without unwillingly picking up a tin of Barbie spaghetti shapes, a box of cereal with Lightning McQueen smirking from the front, or a bag of fruit chews with a catchy jingle.
(3) There's a scene in Friday Night Dinner when Adam, a jingle writer by trade, gathers the family around a radio to hear his ditty for a car-insurance company.
(4) Now it hosts the headquarters of BBC Scotland and Scottish Television and something called The Hub, which seems to be a honeycomb of "units" and "pods" for people who want to make animated short films and radio advertising jingles.
(5) Another Guangzhou lawyer, Tang Jingling, may also be missing.
(6) You must have known,” Price says – laconic, nasal, one leg casually hitched up on the bench, endlessly jingling coins in his pocket – “that to give a senior public figure an arrest warning could lead to a complaint direct to the commissioner’s office.” Do you not see how important Mr Mitchell is?
(7) It's 6.30pm and I'm on the sofa, watching an overgrown blue woolly person with a red security blanket and a bell in his foot, who is squeaking and jingling through a sun-dappled wood in the company of a large, excitable dolly - her hair stands on end when she's especially thrilled - who says, 'Ooh!
(8) In jingle thinking the subjects internally jumped every second word in a nine-word circular jingle.
(9) The infamy did not come from the fact that the company was using a catchy jingle to get people addicted to carcinogens.
(10) Jingle shells … Dustin Hoffman, Judi Dench and a tortoise star in the BBC adaptation of Roald Dahl’s Esio Trot.
(11) Nonetheless there is more than a jingling ring of truth to his argument.
(12) The prisoner's final words as he was put to death by a massive overdose of pentobarbital, obtained from an unnamed Oklahoma compounding pharmacy, were: “I feel my whole body burning.” The Apothecary Shoppe makes up – or compounds – medication customised to individual customers under the jingle “the most important thing we did today was fill your prescription”.
(13) There are breast shampoo dispensers and a holiday gag gift you can’t unsee called Jingle Jugs .
(14) Other finds include an amber charm in the shape of a gladiator's helmet, which may have been a good luck charm for an actual gladiator; a horse harness ornament combining two lucky symbols, a fist and a phallus, plus clappers to make a jingling sound as the horse moved; and a set of fine-quality pewter bowls and cups, which were deliberately thrown into a deep well.
(15) If you want to get anywhere in life, jingle the coins.
(16) The party’s name – which echoes not just Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign slogan, but also a TV jingle for Spain’s European and World Cup-winning football team – came during a car journey a few months after the forming of the initial pact between Iglesias and Urbán.
(17) 'Sometimes the script is wrong, and Andy has to write on the hoof, sitting in front of the screen, and he makes up whole little jingles ... it all comes out.
(18) The digital sky with clouds that curdle before your eyes is unsettling and there’s a sitcom-like jingle playing on a tortuous loop.
(19) Inspired by Iona and Peter Opie's classic studies of the playground in the 1950s , which had documented the incorporation of advertising jingles and TV theme tunes into clapping and singing games, the researchers discovered children's games based on dance routines from Britain's Got Talent and The X Factor .
(20) To mark the new programme, which goes out between 11am and 1pm, there are some jazzy, slinky jingles and a revised acronym for the Togs.