Verb (used without object) : The diamond on her finger twinkled in the firelight. From Dictionary.com.
July 4, 2006, 8: 03 pm texasholdem free games says: texasholdem freegames sportswriting greater allowably plump twinkler, defendants. From Wordnik.com. [The Volokh Conspiracy » How do we pronounce “Volokh”?] Reference
His circumspect info thieving reminded him of his happier, more innocent days as a child on Moth when the most extravagant thing he had strived to steal was a used entertainment cube or a child's mutating twinkler-and occasionally, when times were hard, food for himself and Mother Mastiff. From Wordnik.com. [Flinx's Folly]
In these our sight plunges quite beyond any twinkler we have yet visited. From Wordnik.com. [Two on a Tower] Reference
With Friday's twinkler in the books, check out Lincecum's Major League ranks. From Wordnik.com. [MVN] Reference
"Yon's the first twinkler," said Peke, seeing it at once, though his gaze was apparently fixed on the ground. From Wordnik.com. [The Treasure of Heaven A Romance of Riches] Reference
I shall tell him that his �brightest star of the east� is become a northern luminary, and has dimmed the lustre of every other twinkler. From Wordnik.com. [Isabella. A Novel] Reference
This whimsical revision of the Christmas legend works from the premise that Santa Claus is not the jolly old twinkler we know, but a brutish force of nature. From Wordnik.com. [The Independent - Frontpage RSS Feed] Reference
Texasholdem freegames sportswriting greater allowably plump twinkler,defendants. From Wordnik.com. [The Volokh Conspiracy » How do we pronounce “Volokh”?] Reference
You need money, I heard you say; I suppose you're afraid to hock this twinkler "-- touching the pearl pendant. From Wordnik.com. [No. 13 Washington Square] Reference
May 6th, 2006 at 3:50 pm twinkler, 64: While it is true that an editorial represents the view of the newspaper while an op-ed piece is the view of a contributor, the choice of op-ed pieces and op-ed authors are not independent of the paper’s political bias. From Wordnik.com. [Firedoglake » Great Op-Ed in the Washington Post] Reference
Reply twinkler. From Wordnik.com. [Firedoglake » Hayden Hearings Begin Today for DCI Post] Reference
Cricket-loving Nobel playwright Harold Pinter used one of his enduring masterpieces, No Man's Land (1975), to anoint the two grand thespian knights John Gielgud and Ralph Richardson with a genuflection to the respective saints, Spooner and Hirst, from cricket's golden age – handsome, upright Marlborough gent Reggie Spooner (1880-1961, 10 Tests), free spirit who "handled his bat as a lady handled her fan", and Kirkheaton's versatile twinkler George Hirst (1871-1954, 24 Tests), finest all-rounder after Grace and universally loved as "cricket's happy warrior". From Wordnik.com. [From Jeeves to Herriot: all creatures great and sporty | Frank Keating] Reference
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