Use "rugby" in a sentence
rugby example sentences
rugby
1. remembering the weekend before and the chap in the bar with the rugby pectorals and
2. In his fifties, but he had been a powerful Rugby player in his time and still had that aura of invulnerable solid strength that the Rugby boys have, even if his hair was a little grey and his belly bursting out over the edge of his trousers
3. The rugby boys could stuff their less than
4. The rugby boys could stuff their less than subtle gibes and always rowdy insults where the sun rarely ever shined (you could never quite tell with one or two of them)
5. Goldie Barrett decided this was the perfect time for a game of Rugby, but her relatives didn’t seem interested in joining her
6. Libby Barrett had no interest in playing Rugby, much preferring the calmer activity of assembling jigsaw puzzles
7. It was a nice day in Trouble Valley and some of the kids were having a rugby game in the fields nearby the Schoolhouse
8. Goldie went for a big, long kick and the ball flew high, high into the air, higher than any rugby ball the villagers of Trouble Valley had ever seen or heard of, and off it went, flying higher and higher, traveling into the distance
9. out of the tunnel mouth, a black, bristled, jointed lobster like leg as thick as a rugby pole and as long
10. rugby team that was on tour and the girls sat choosing which hunks
11. So when I saw them hosing down the back of their ambulance at the Police Station’s morgue I thought that I should walk over to them and educate them regarding the Western Province rugby team, which I supported…them not, being ignorant of all things rugby
12. My new friend, Mark the Rooinek, also joined me since he was definitely bright, even if not the best of detectives regarding indecent assault cases on rugby fields at that time
13. There are two well documented cases in South African criminal history where folks fired into the air in celebration, only to have one of their falling bullets kill a child in his bed, and another seriously wound someone in a rugby stadium
14. Once a fire work display was held at the local rugby stadium and we received many calls, more than 100, that mortar bombs are exploding in that vicinity
15. She nudged her chin toward the young school kids playing touch rugby on the sand
16. If truth be known, he’d played rugby in worse shape
17. The South Africans though can be identified by their rugby shirts and the local children sometimes shout “Boertjie” at them as a term of endearment
18. It seems to me that this could be a huge - for one of the sport game companies to make a wheelchair rugby
19. This has created a mentality of ‘them and us’ which has persisted from the days when police were used to squash anti-war demonstrations and street marches, such as the one against the South African's Springboks Rugby team playing matches in Brisbane in 1971
20. University together; they had played in the same rugby team and had won the premiership
21. Rugby Club finished playing other Midwestern club teams
22. I liked the contact involved in our intramural sports, but rugby was beyond the pale
23. Jake plays for the Irish rugby team
24. Again another rugby player that was attractive, I've been watching the wrong channel!
25. “The Irish rugby team
26. They weren't always so close together as they were now, Connor used to play Rugby with Jake in the first team and was amazing but then he took a hit to save Jake and he could never really play the same again so he left
27. Most the talk was about the picnic later on with cricket and rugby games being played
28. Across the field were Ben, Paul, Jake and Connor playing catch with a rugby ball
29. “Put this under your dress' He said showing me the rugby ball, I looked at him as if he was crazy
30. The pub was busy because there was a rugby game on, Connor and Jake had moved over talking to some guys on the other side of the bar who were asking for pictures
31. Everyone at the table looked shocked but still didn't say anything they just smiled and started talking again about rugby games or whatever, I didn't understand and even if I wanted to I couldn't concentrate as Chris was so close smelling my hair and having his hands around me
32. The only place I'd been called by my surname was at high school and although I hadn't had a bad time I hated everything about it, especially the assumption that everyone was a patriotic rugby playing philistine
33. Gordon Ferris grew up in the west of Scotland, enjoying both rugby and writing from an early age
34. I had never been to a live rugby match before, tending to watch the
35. Luckily, only rugby and athletics results were ever announced at assembly
36. what your product is about? There’s no point in getting thousands of rugby
37. The physical education teacher there, a Mister Pike was more of a Rugby man and made no secret of the fact that he did not like Soccer at all
38. The two main field sports that were played at the school were Rugby Union and
39. What a character! It was this rugby player who used to commute by bike all over the Lower Mainland and up the valley
40. It was Jed’s rugby night and he was leaving early for his training session
41. There was a look of complete astonishment on his face as he suddenly saw his wife hurtling through the air towards him in a diving rugby tackle
42. Watching football is not my cup of tea; I prefer to watch rugby
43. At the same time, he knew more about rugby and cricket than Roger
44. “Teach!” Joey saw some long-legged, red insect-looking things the size of a rugby ball run out of his way
45. but we prefer Rovers ‘cos they have really nice pasties even if they play in a Rugby ground and all)
46. It was on the occasion of the visit of the Archbishop of Canterbury, a man called Ramsay who looked more like a rugby forward than any priest the school had ever seen
47. Could that be because he dressed to the left? Certainly it was that swerve to the left that allowed him to avoid ever being tackled in rugby
48. Wat’s jokes have now deteriorated to the point where he’s reciting nursery rhymes at Bridgend rugby club:
49. Returned home, a fortnight later and working at the Samuels Crescent, Whitchurch rugby clubhouse, Watkin, on his fifth pint, resorts to visual descriptions of his favourite comedies:
50. In the clubhouse, Watkin tells everyone who wants to listen that he’s going to the Japan v Wales rugby match