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Showing results for punchinello.
Definitions

punchinello

[puhn-chuh-nel-oh] / ˌpʌn tʃəˈnɛl oʊ /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Like a maddened punchinello, he flailed at the gathering crowds of refugees, screaming at them to back away from the bank.

From Time Magazine Archive

No sympathy, no best wishes rose to greet brown, broad-shouldered Champion Max Baer as that prime poseur, playboy and punchinello of the U. S. prize ring parted the ropes.

From Time Magazine Archive

It was as though a parrot or a punchinello spoke, and sentences which were unexpected could not be understood.

From Heroes of the Telegraph by Munro, John

So contemptible had the Pope become, even in the eyes of devout Catholics, that de Maistre called the inflexible but supine Pontiff a punchinello of no importance.

From The Life of Napoleon Bonaparte Vol. III. (of IV.) by Sloane, William Milligan

Far-sighted folks became aware that the pretty tricks of the puppets were due to an English punchinello.

From My Lords of Strogue, Vol. I (of III) A Chronicle of Ireland, from the Convention to the Union by Wingfield, Lewis