Can you fancy anything less clubable than a set of men like this?
2
Boswell, however, was, as his proposer said, a thoroughly "clubable" man, and once a member, his good humour secured his popularity.
3
I presume that two species of animals do not consider one another companionable, or clubable, unless their behaviour and their persons are reciprocally agreeable.
1
We must, reluctantly, celebrate the efforts of the not particularly clubbable Jeffrey Katzenberg.
2
The lithographs also convey a palpable sense of a clubbable generation.
3
Few compare him with clubbable anecdotalists such as Peter Ustinov or David Niven.
4
Another quite funny word is clubbable, used to describe someone.
5
A clubbable fellow with decent manners, but lacking the edge required in a changing world.
6
And while he's not clubbable, he's not prickly either.
7
I suppose I am not, as Johnson said, a "clubbable" man.
8
He fulfils Johnson's test of a good fellow: he is "a clubbable man."
9
A very clubbable sort, with a harmless manner, that's the only way I can put it.
10
Spock is the more self-important, less clubbable Lennon.
11
Bradman was not a clubbable man, but as a player he has had no real equal or successor.
12
As Jack stepped back into the corridor, Natalie said, "I didn't have you as the clubbable type."
13
He's a large-framed, confidence-radiating man with a light English accent-anearlier generation might have called him "clubbable."
14
The title is appropriate: this is history with the emphasis on story, clubbable rather than scholarly but not overly so.
15
Hester admits he is not the most clubbable of folks and smart and successful though he is, does not get everything right.
16
Is this a confirmation, I wonder, of the theory entertained by Mr. Emerson and other philosophers, that woman is not a 'clubbable' animal?