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"reveller" Definitions
  1. a person who is having fun in a noisy way, usually with a group of other people and often after drinking alcohol
"reveller" Antonyms

42 Sentences With "reveller"

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

The trouble is that Chalamet, monkishly pale and junkie-thin, makes an unconvincing reveller.
As the evening's celebrations reach their zenith, one reveller nonchalantly fires a bazooka into the night sky.
Thomas Kelly, the reveller who had lunged at Ung's group, had misjudged the effect of his cursing and gesturing.
On March 2260th the president posted a video of one Carnival reveller urinating on another in an act of performance art.
The moment we are finally taken down to lock eyes with another albeit grainy reveller beside us, the video cuts off... So near but so far.
The boy grew up believing himself to be the true-born son of the royal pair, and all went well until one day a drunken reveller taunted him with being nothing of the sort.
An artist who grew up in Hong Kong was delighted to stumble onto the Cantopop star Denise Ho. "She was my only queer icon growing up," the reveller said, picking up a microphone to sing "千千萬萬個我" ("Thousands of Me").
"People used to go to their local priest for pastoral care; they now come to A&E," says Chris Uff, a consultant neurosurgeon who recalls a well oiled reveller chasing down an ambulance on New Year's Eve to ask whether he had money on his bus pass.
Dear old Dennis is positively electric looking, all jitter and growl, a gurning assemblage of bee-stung lips—the lips of an inexperienced reveller who's burnished their gums with an accidental, unintentional, and incredibly unwanted numbness that for all their effort just won't go away—and awards ceremony glamour.
There are Corbyn T-shirts all over the place, as well as more exotic items of clothing: David Cameron, Britain's former prime minister, was photographed at a pop festival, drink in one hand, cigarette in the other, half-embracing a female reveller who was wearing a cape with Corbyn's name on the back, encircled by a heart.
Yafforth once had two shops, three brickyards, and a pub. The pub was named after a horse named Reveller, winner of the 1818 St Leger Stakes classic at Doncaster. The pub closed in the late 1990s and is now a residential property. The only reminder of its name is the Reveller Mews across the road.
Greenwich Park is a 1691 comedy play by the English writer William Mountfort. The original cast included Anthony Leigh as Sir Thomas Reveller, James Nokes as Raison, Cave Underhill as Sasaphras, John Hodgson as Lord Worthy, William Mountfort as Young Reveller, William Bowen as Thoughtless John Bowman as Beau, George Bright as Bully Bounce, Elizabeth Barry as Dorinda, Susanna Mountfort as Florella and Frances Maria Knight as Mrs Raison.
In the autumn he won a second Richmond Cup and a second Dundas Stakes. In 1821 the ten-year-old began a rivalry with the 1818 St Leger winner Reveller. On 4 July Doctor Syntax was beaten by Reveller in the Lancaster Gold Cup but reversed the form to win his seventh Preston Gold Cup a week later. At Richmond in October, Doctor Syntax won both the Richmond Cup and the Dundas Stakes for the third time.
Galata was retired from racing to become a broodmare at Lord Exeter's stud. Despite producing nine foals and being covered by leading stallions including Reveller and Velocipede, she produced no notable winners. She died in 1848 while in foal to Plenipotentiary.
In 1847, he became Private Secretary to Lord Lansdowne, Lord President of the Council. In 1849, he published his first book of poetry, The Strayed Reveller. In 1850 Wordsworth died; Arnold published his "Memorial Verses" on the older poet in Fraser's Magazine.
RevellerPeirse operated a racing stud at Bedale Hall and had some success on the racecourse. He won the St Leger Stakes twice with Ebor in 1817 and Reveller in 1818.Doncaster Racing and Events History St Leger Winners Peirse died on 14 May 1824.
A reveller returning from Tyburn House saw her walking quickly; he was the last person known to see her alive. At around 6 a.m., a passing labourer saw women's items near a water- filled pit. One of the items was a woman's shoe with blood on it.
He produced his first CD Reveller (now out of print) when he was seventeen. After high school he toured Ireland for four months as street musician.Der 20-Finger-Gitarrist (in German). Accessed on December 15, 2007 In 1997 he recorded his second CD Hope (out of print) and finished third in the 1998 Open Strings Festival in Osnabrück, Germany.
Cast: (in alphabetical order) Tim Barlow (Elderly Drunk); Darren Carr (Black Boy); Jim Carter (Ticket Inspector); Emma Cunniffe (Drained Young Woman); Clint Dyer (Walkman Boy); Jello Edwards (Middle Aged Woman); Annette Ekblom (Boy's Mum); Carmen Ejogo (Girl); Simon Kunz (White Pinstripe Suit Man); Hans Matheson (Michael); Simon Pegg (Clerk); Sean Pertwee (Driver); Lee Ross (Male Reveller); Don Warrington (Preacher).
The Portsmouth 10 Mile race in 1996 was among his last notable achievements. His reveller lifestyle may have contributed to deteriorating performances.Honolulu Star, December 4, 2006: Lifestyle and illness felled Honolulu Marathon winner Masya died in September 2003, aged 33, after a period of illness. At his death, he was accompanied by his friend Cosmas Ndeti.
Pablito de Cádiz (1908–January 24, 2004) was a Spanish flamenco dancer (bailaor). He was born in Cádiz. His real name was Pablo Jiménez Pérez, and he was a celebrity in flamenco cafés (tablaos) with his estilos festeros (reveller styles).Félix Rodríguez, "Pablito de Cádiz bailaor de esencias añejas (y II)", Diario de Cádiz, March 1, 2011 (in Spanish).
However, Lindwall needed respite and dietary discipline in order to completely ward off his hepatitis. He was no longer the reveller that Miller once knew. After Australia had made 9/515, Lindwall took a match total of 6/124, as the hosts were forced to follow on in the First Test at Sabina Park in Kingston, Jamaica. Australia went on to win by nine wickets.
Reveller and courtesan by Euphronios, c. 500 BC, BM E 44 The innovation of the red- figure technique was an Athenian invention of the late 6th century. It was quite the opposite of black-figure which had a red background. The ability to render detail by direct painting rather than incision offered new expressive possibilities to artists such as three-quarter profiles, greater anatomical detail and the representation of perspective.
She disappears, and the creature is left alone in the woods to ruminate on the error of his ways. The monster prince is captured by a hunter, who hopes to sell him as a curiosity. On the way back to the town, they encounter a reveller who says the whole town is rejoicing because Prince Darling is dead. He says the people have released Suleiman from prison and crowned him as the new king.
A drunk reveller (Chaplin) returns home to a scolding from his wife. Then his equally inebriated neighbor (Arbuckle) goes home to a cold reception from his wife. When the first couple hear the physical altercation across the hall (the second man starts strangling his wife after she hits him), the reveller's wife sends him to investigate. The two men flee together and end up in a cafe, where they also cause trouble.
A further move would see him ride for Sir M M Sykes. He would also ride for Henry Peirse and Sir Frank Standish. He would twice win the St Leger for Gilbert Crompton - on Lounger in 1797 and Quiz in 1801 - and once, aged nearly 50, for the Duke of Hamilton on William in 1814. Other horses on which he made his name included Cammillus, Magistrate, Prime Minister, Sir Malagigi, Rosetta, Rosanne, Reveller, Lisette, Scancalaldi, Epperston, Cambyses and Consul.
After arriving in England, Hazelhoff Roelfzema worked out this plan and was instructed by Queen Wilhelmina and the British secret service to execute the plan under the name . The first officer who was put ashore by boat was Peter Tazelaar. On 23 November 1941, he dressed in a tuxedo in Scheveningen in preparation for landing. He pretended to be a drunk reveller and was able to slip past German sentries guarding the beach by the casino.
Catgut was a brown mare bred by her owner George FitzRoy, 4th Duke of Grafton at his stud at Euston Hall in Suffolk. Her dam, Vanity, was bred by the 4th Duke's father Augustus FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Grafton and won twelve races before being retired to stud. In 1815 the mare was covered by two stallions, Comus and the less well-known Juniper. Comus finished third in the Derby and sired many good horses including the classic winners Grey Momus and Reveller.
She recorded her first success in the £300 Anson Stakes, over five furlongs, winning comfortably by a length from the colts Bohemian and Morisco. At the Second October meeting, she started the 11/8 against twelve opponents in the Clearwell Stakes. Ridden by John Barham Day, Oxygen won the five furlong race impressively by two or three lengths from Lord Egremont's unnamed black filly. The unplaced runners included a filly sired by Reveller out of Snowdrop who was later named Galantine.
The novel is set in the year 1893. It begins with the a description of the death of a New Year's Eve reveller, later attributed to a mythological creature that was described in a 1669 pamphlet Strange News out of Essex, or The Winged Serpent. This is followed by a description of the recent death of Cora Seaborne's abusive husband. Cora lives in London with her son Francis and his governess Martha who is also a close companion of Cora's.
The cause was a progressive paralysis, attributed in some sources to a "brain ailment" ("dolencia de cerebro"). The circle of his theatrical friends included Juan Eugenio Hartzenbusch, Julián Romea and Francisco Camprodón. As a young man he became known for a somewhat "Bohemian" lifestyle, known as a reveller with a weakness for women and gambling. On November 1861 he suffered an attack of Hemiparesis, apparently in the context of some degenerative condition, which left the left side of his body paralysed.
103-28 # Marston, in turn, replied with Jack Drum's Entertainment (1600), a play acted by the Children of Paul's, satirizing Jonson as Brabant Senior, a cuckold. # In Cynthia's Revels (1600), acted by the Children of the Chapel, Jonson satirizes both Marston and Dekker. The former is thought to be represented by the character Hedon, a "light voluptuous reveller," and the latter by Anaides, a "strange arrogating puff." # Marston next attacked Jonson in What You Will (1601), a play most likely acted by the Children of Paul's.
Cassius Dio, Roman History, 9 fr. 10 Plutarch wrote that his words "brought conviction to most of the Tarentines, and a murmur of applause ran through the assembly. But those who were afraid that if peace were made they would be given up to the Romans, reviled the people for tamely submitting to such shameless treatment from a drunken reveller, and banding together they cast Meton out." After that a decree to send envoys from Tarentum and other Greek cities in Italy to Pyrrhus was passed.
Until 1913, there was no requirement for British racehorses to have official names and the filly who would become Galantine raced unnamed in 1830. In the early 19th century most horses began their careers at the age of three and there were relatively few races for two-year-olds. One of the most important events for juveniles was the Clearwell Stakes at the Newmarket Second October meeting, in which Galantine (officially Sir M. Wood's b. f. by Reveller, out of Snowdrop) made her first racecourse appearance.
In September 1986, aged 20, Davenport co- founded Gatecrasher Ltd with Jeremy Taylor. The company organised parties for teenagers at country houses such as Longleat and Weston Park, which were attended by up to 10,000 party-goers at any one time and at the height of their success were generating £1,000,000 a year. The idea behind the balls was to enable wealthy teenagers at single-sex boarding schools to meet the opposite sex and drink large amounts of alcohol. As one reveller put it, "I'm here to get drunk and get laid".
Galantine was a bay mare bred by Sir Mark Wood, 1st Baronet the Member of Parliament for Gatton and owned during her racing career by his son and successor Sir Mark Wood, 2nd Baronet. She was sired by Reveller, a Yorkshire champion whose wins included the St Leger Stakes in 1818 and many other long-distance races on Northern courses. Galantine was his only classic winner, but he sired Mark Wood's Ascot Gold Cup winner Lucetta as well as The Mummer (July Stakes) and Ascot (St. James's Palace Stakes).
Returning as a four-year-old and refusing to be ridden by Bill Scott, Jack Spigot won the 450-guinea Newcastle Convivial Stakes ridden by Robert Johnson. In his only other start of 1822, he was third and last in the 3.25-mile Preston Cup, losing to Reveller and the 11-year-old Dr. Syntax. Jack Spigot only ran once more, on 14 April 1823 he was unplaced in the Craven Stakes won by the Duke of Rutland's colt Scarborough. Thomas Orde-Powlett retired from racing in September 1823 and put his horses up for sale at the Doncaster meeting.
His literary career — leaving out the two prize poems — had begun in 1849 with the publication of The Strayed Reveller and Other Poems by A., which attracted little notice and was soon withdrawn. It contained what is perhaps Arnold's most purely poetical poem, "The Forsaken Merman." Empedocles on Etna and Other Poems (among them "Tristram and Iseult"), published in 1852, had a similar fate. In 1858 he published his tragedy of Merope, calculated, he wrote to a friend, "rather to inaugurate my Professorship with dignity than to move deeply the present race of humans," and chiefly remarkable for some experiments in unusual – and unsuccessful – metres.
In 1822, the eleven-year-old Doctor Syntax was beaten by Reveller in the Lancaster Gold Cup, and in September his run of wins in the Preston Gold Cup came to an end when he finished second to the same horse, with the 1821 St Leger winner Jack Spigot in third. In October, Doctor Syntax won his third Richmond Cup and the Gold Cup at Northallerton. Doctor Syntax began his final season by winning the Gosforth Stakes at Newcastle Racecourse in July and then won the Gold Cup at Pontefract in September. Later that month he appeared at Doncaster Racecourse where he finished third in the Fitzwilliam Stakes and fourth in the Doncaster Cup.
Morton is bedecked as Master of Merry Disports, while Scrooby, vested as English priest, wears a chaplet of vine leaves on his head and a garland over one shoulder; he is Abbot of Misrule. Lackland enters behind them; he is May Lord; he wears white, with a rainbow scarf across his breast and a small dress sword at his side. Prence is his comic train-bearer, and he is attended by the Nine Worthies. Every form of traditional English reveller is present, including nymphs, satyrs, dwarfs, fauns, mummers, shepherds and shepherdesses, Morris dancers, sword dancers, green men, wild men, jugglers, tumblers, minstrels, archers, and mountebanks; there are even an ape, a hobby horse and a dancing bear.
That you are, and a performer far more wonderful than Marsyas. He indeed with instruments used to charm the souls of men by the power of his breath, and the players of his music do so still: for the melodies of Olympus are derived from Marsyas who taught them [...] But you produce the same effect with your words only, and do not require the flute: that is the difference between you and him. [...] And if I were not afraid that you would think me hopelessly drunk, I would have sworn as well as spoken to the influence which they have always had and still have over me. For my heart leaps within me more than that of any Corybantian reveller, and my eyes rain tears when I hear them.
They included: Beaugard's Father in Otway's The Atheist, Rogero in Thomas Southerne's The Disappointment, Sir Paul Squelch in Richard Brome's Northern Lass, Crack in Crowne's Sir Courtly Nice, Trappolin in Nahum Tate's Duke and No Duke, Security in Tate's Cuckold's Haven, an adaptation of Eastward Hoe, Scaramouch in William Mountfort's Dr. Faustus, Sir Feeble Fainwou'd in Behn's Lucky Chance, Scaramouch in her Emperor of the Moon, Sir William Belfond in Shadwell's The Squire of Alsatia, Justice Grub in Fool's Preferment, altered by D'Urfey from Fletcher's The Noble Gentleman, Lord Stately in Crowne's English Friar, Mustapha in Dryden's Don Sebastian, Mercury in Dryden's Amphitryon, Abbé in Mountfort's Sir Anthony Love, Tope in Shadwell's Scowrers, Sir Thomas Reveller in Mountfort's ', Lady Addleplot in D'Urfey's Love for Money, Van Grin in D'Urfey's Marriage-Hater Match'd, and Major-general Blunt in Shadwell's Volunteers. John Genest believed Leigh was the original Aldo in Dryden's Limberham. Leigh died of fever in December 1692, in the same season as James Nokes, and these deaths, combined with the murder of William Mountfort, greatly weakened the company.

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