Verb (used with object) : The boss finally bludgeoned him into accepting responsibility. From Dictionary.com.
Blue beachball buddy bludgeoner trackdown termination tradeoff. From Wordnik.com. [Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror: Jim Baen's Universe 12 - Eric Flint] Reference
Mandel isn't a bludgeoner; his young, fresh cast is mighty good; and, to its credit, the movie resists the impulse to wrap everything up with a smiley ending. From Wordnik.com. [The Games People Play] Reference
Ready 2 Rumble was a colourful, comic jaw-bludgeoner which won its host hardware a lot of early praise. From Wordnik.com. [Kikizo.com Video Games Website XML Feed] Reference
Tendulkar has often been more of a touch artist than a bludgeoner but today he showed the gamut from subtle to sledgehammer. From Wordnik.com. [Cricinfo news from Cricinfo] Reference
Dawkins, after all, made his name as a bludgeoner of rims, while DeRozan referred to himself on Thursday as "a finesse dunker.". From Wordnik.com. [Thestar.com - Home Page] Reference
But a closer inspection of the lobby footage takes the wind out of defense arguments that Lowery left Stein's apartment too splatter-free to have been her bludgeoner. From Wordnik.com. [NY Post: News] Reference
He was a plodder and a bludgeoner. From Wordnik.com. [The Gunslinger]
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