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"gombeen-man" Definitions
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10 Sentences With "gombeen man"

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

Mr Reynolds is suing over a November 1994 report headed Goodbye gombeen man.
But in this land of sleaze and cronyism, the gombeen man is king.
My friends dismissed him as a Kerry sheep thief and a bog Irish gombeen man.
The whole world can call me a fibber or a gombeen man, because I won't be suing.
A year before the release of The Snake's Pass, Stoker published chapter three "The Gombeen Man" as a short story in The People.
This poor innocent was charging just 60 per cent., but his terms were lavishly liberal as compared with those of the gombeen man.
Alternative modern parlance for a gombeen man is someone "on the make". It is also used to describe certain Independent politicians who are seen to prioritize their constituents needs, no matter how trivial, over national interests.
Several years later, local Gombeen man McRoarty is attending a meeting of the Carberry Memorial Committee. His daughter Maire is returning home from England. On the train, Maire meets Englishman Crispin Brown, who wishes to settle in Ballymorgan. A large house in Ballymorgan named Kilgarrig is soon to be auctioned.
The Hill has Murdock in its clutches because he is such a greedy man he wants to find the gold of The King of Snakes. Murdock's nickname of the town is the "Gombeen man," which can be described as a shady, business man. Richard "Dick" Sutherland: Dick is hired by Murdock to do scientific work on the hills and research the shifting bog however, he is not allowed to speak of the work he is doing according to his employer. Dick and Arthur went to school together in England.
A gombeen man is a pejorative Hiberno-English term used in Ireland for a shady, small-time "wheeler-dealer" businessman or politician who is always looking to make a quick profit, often at someone else's expense or through the acceptance of bribes. Its origin is the Irish word "gaimbín", meaning monetary interest. The term referred originally to a money-lender and became associated with those shopkeepers and merchants who exploited the starving during the Irish Famine by selling much-needed food and goods on credit at ruinous interest rates.

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