corker
IPA: kˈɔrkɝ
noun
- One who puts corks into bottles.
- (informal) A person or thing that is exceptional or remarkable.
- A surname originating as an occupation.
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Examples of "corker" in Sentences
- The original was a corker at the time.
- Corker subsequently pulled ahead in the polls.
- Corker then walked away to his press conference.
- A corker is something very special … almost one of a kind.
- Your 2nd 'graph has a real corker that needs clarification.
- I know that you know that Corker could have had the ad pulled.
- Sollicker Somewhat equivalent Something excessive. to "corker"
- Father Corker himself was obliged to seek refuge on the continent.
- Corker went on to win the election by less than three percentage points.
- The twist at the end is a corker, but crucial questions remain unanswered.
- The corker was a woman who, in an initial interview, said she had never been sexually abused.
- He told her that she was a "corker," a "dream," and "one sweet song," and that the picture did not do her justice.
- Nick Denton promised a story of the leak would publish later that night, and that it would be a real "corker" (blimey!).
- Cowen & Co. analyst Cai von Rumohr says Boeing is selling itself short with a too-low guidance after a "corker" of a first quarter.
- Hazelton and Dan Dalzell, sure that Dick had a "corker" of a scheme, grinned as happily as though they had already seen it put through with a rush.
- Accordingly, when put upon another boy's back to be horsed, as it was termed, he slipped a large pin, called a corker, in his mouth, and on receiving the first blow stuck it into the neck of the boy who carried him.
- There's hardly a big-sky stereotype he doesn't trick out with new tricks - wait till you catch the man-with-no-name corker he's come up with - but he and co-screenwriters John Logan and James Ward Byrkit are cribbing their plot points not just from classic Westerns but from the likes of
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