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23 Sentences With "bragger"

How to use bragger in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bragger" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bragger". Mastering all the usages of "bragger" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Shane and I met up later at the Bragger home.
"He's not a bragger -- we don't allow that," Barbara Bush said that night.
"But he's not a bragger -- we don't allow that -- but he's decent and honest," she said.
"When Joe first told me about Trump, I said no, that guy's a bragger," Mr. Paslow said.
"'Braggart, to my ears, is more formal than 'bragger,' so I thought our more erudite fans would appreciate the subtlety," he says.
Joe Bragger had just returned from listening to the vice president speak at what he labeled "a whistle stop" at an equipment manufacturer.
Mr. Goplin talked about the tangle of trade and oversupply with his friend Joe Bragger, a sixth-generation dairy farmer in nearby Buffalo County.
Mr. Bragger, 53, a large man with an infectious laugh, has a voice that squeaks like a backyard swing set when he gets excited.
Teaching, training, mentoring, coaching — these are all wonderful means of demonstrating your own talents while positioning you not as a bragger but as an asset.
"At the end of the day, fixing some of these other trade deals for the rest of our country, I'm O.K. with it," Mr. Bragger said.
Perhaps Trump is the ultimate gift to feminists: a grabber and bragger who has focused the world's attention on the outrages women quietly endure on a chronic basis without notice.
Shane knew another farmer, Joe Bragger, who was attending the vice president's rally the next day, so we arranged to have dinner afterward with Joe and his family at their home.
Sean Penn tried to be super stealthy when he interviewed El Chapo, but he was a loud bragger in the middle of a restaurant just before the story broke ... according to Page Six.
When Noel, his wife, announced dinner was ready, I turned off my recorder, put down my notepad and sat down with the Bragger clan and Shane on the porch looking out over a part of his farm.
He rented horse boxes in Kensington, housing Bragger in one box, while he lived in the other. According to Bill Whittaker, Smith won the nomination fee for Bragger by winning at two-up. Bragger won 13 races including the Tramway stakes at Group level, establishing Smith as a Sydney trainer and Smith won a significant amount of money backing Bragger to win races. But when Bragger went for a spell, Smith blew all of his winnings on flashy suits, hired cars and drinking.
June Bragger (2 June 1929 – 27 June 1997) played 5 test matches for the England women's cricket team between 1963 and 1966. She was born in Birmingham and died in Solihull, Warwickshire.
Almost broke, Smith was saved when Bragger returned from his spell and won. After this episode Smith never went broke again. Bragger continued to win races until he was a ten-year-old, when he had to be destroyed after becoming caught in a float fire on his way home from a race meeting. Smith's reputation as an emerging trainer was further enhanced with the success of Playboy, which he also owned, in the 1949 AJC Derby, giving Smith his first Group 1 winner and the first of 35 derby winners Smith trained in Australia.
She starts to recognize Arc as the prince who saved her when as a child. ; : : As Princess of the Demon World (Underworld), Glenda is fiercely competitive and has strong magical powers. She immediately butts heads with Yucie, her rival to become the Platinum Princess. Glenda is a bragger who frequently proclaims herself as"fantastic" and "elegant", and is also often selfish, jealous, and temperamental.
Smith became a trainer, acquiring his licence in 1941. His first success came in 1942 with Bragger a rogue horse he bought from Wagga property owner Mack Sawyer. He broke in the horse, and named him using his own nickname. Smith also registered racing silks of green and blue vertical stripes, which were to become famous in later years as the colours of Tulloch Lodge horses.
Still to this day the PM Park in Clear Lake, Iowa is owned by the Patriarchs Militant. The Patriarchs lease out the facilities to Cristine and Rahn Bragger to run restaurant and lodging facilities. At least once a year, the Patriarchs Militant make their way to the park for a week at a time holding meetings, ceremonies, and various other events. This point of time is called PM Week.
A piece of timber projecting in the same way was called a "tassel" or a "bragger" in England. An interior look at the roof of a corbelled house in South Africa The technique of corbelling, where rows of corbels deeply keyed inside a wall support a projecting wall or parapet, has been used since Neolithic (New Stone Age) times. It is common in medieval architecture and in the Scottish baronial style as well as in the vocabulary of classical architecture, such as the modillions of a Corinthian cornice, Hindu temple architecture and in ancient Chinese architecture. The corbel arch and corbel vault use the technique systematically to make openings in walls and to form ceilings.
Hergé started collecting these types of words for use in Haddock's outbursts, and on occasion even searched dictionaries to come up with inspiration. As a result, Captain Haddock's colourful insults began to include "bashi-bazouk", "visigoths", "kleptomaniac", "sea gherkin", "anacoluthon", "pockmark", "nincompoop", "abominable snowman", "nitwits", "scoundrels", "steam rollers", "parasites", "vegetarians", "floundering oath", "carpet seller", "blundering Bazookas", "Popinjay", "bragger", "pinheads", "miserable slugs", "ectomorph", "maniacs", "pickled herring"; "freshwater swabs", "miserable molecule of mildew","Logarithm", "bandits", "orang-outangs", "cercopithecuses", "Polynesians", "iconoclasts", "ruffians", "fancy-dress freebooter", "ignoramus", "sycophant", "dizzard", "black-beetle", "pyrographer", "slave- trader" and "Fuzzy Wuzzy", but again, nothing actually considered a swear word. On one occasion, this scheme appeared to backfire. In one particularly angry state, Hergé had the captain yell the word "pneumothorax" (a medical emergency caused by the collapse of the lung within the chest).
2nd Test: South Africa Women v England Women at Johannesburg, 17–20 Dec 1960, from Cricinfo, retrieved 24 August 2006 In 1963 England took what was to be their last series win over Australia for 42 years. In the first Test, England made 91 for three in the final innings, but in the second match at the North Marine Road Ground in Scarborough England were 97 behind with nine second-innings wickets in hand by the close of the second day. Wickets fell steadily throughout the third day, and England fell from 79 for four to 91 for nine; however, Eileen Vigor and June Bragger held on for the tenth wicket to draw the game. Three weeks later, the teams met for the third and final decider at The Oval, and captain Mary Duggan, in her last Test, scored her second Test century as England declared on 254 for eight.

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